SBL Press's Avatar

SBL Press

@sblpress

SBL Press simultaneously publishes hardcover, paperback, and ebook editions of essential research in the fields of biblical studies and related disciplines.

1,556
Followers
395
Following
358
Posts
04.02.2025
Joined
Posts Following

Latest posts by SBL Press @sblpress

Interpretations that assume that the silence of the individual before the king indicates guilt are of concern because in my context those silenced by ecclesiastical authority include little ones who have suffered child sexual abuse within the Anglican Church of Australia. I critique the imperial ideology
of the parable of the royal wedding feast and its interpretations by applying a preferential option for such marginalized little ones.

—Ruth Christa Mathieson

Interpretations that assume that the silence of the individual before the king indicates guilt are of concern because in my context those silenced by ecclesiastical authority include little ones who have suffered child sexual abuse within the Anglican Church of Australia. I critique the imperial ideology of the parable of the royal wedding feast and its interpretations by applying a preferential option for such marginalized little ones. —Ruth Christa Mathieson

Read Matthew's Parable of the Royal Wedding Feast: A Sociorhetorical Interpretation by Ruth Christa Mathieson buff.ly/YpCgcrG #WomensHistorySBL26

11.03.2026 15:45 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Despite being regarded as such an unending treasury of gold and of life-giving water, in truth Paul’s letters also provided Chrysostom and his congregants at Antioch and Constantinople with a steady stream of statements that were the cause of vexation, consternation, embarrassment, and
puzzlement—less gold, apparently, than gall.

—Margaret M. Mitchell

Despite being regarded as such an unending treasury of gold and of life-giving water, in truth Paul’s letters also provided Chrysostom and his congregants at Antioch and Constantinople with a steady stream of statements that were the cause of vexation, consternation, embarrassment, and puzzlement—less gold, apparently, than gall. —Margaret M. Mitchell

Read John Chrysostom on Paul: Praises and Problem Passages by Margaret M. Mitchell. buff.ly/wmKfKMk #WomensHistorySBL26

10.03.2026 15:02 👍 2 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Elizabeth Catlett, In Sojourner Truth I Fought for the Rights of Women as well as Negroes, from “The Negro Woman” series, 1947, ink and graphite on paper, 48 × 31 cm. Courtesy the National Museum of African American History & Culture.

Elizabeth Catlett, In Sojourner Truth I Fought for the Rights of Women as well as Negroes, from “The Negro Woman” series, 1947, ink and graphite on paper, 48 × 31 cm. Courtesy the National Museum of African American History & Culture.

"Sarah Grimké...wrote a series of letters promoting gender equality to a fellow abolitionist in 1837. She pointed to Gen 1:26–27, emphasizing that male and female were both created in God’s image." Read The Bible and the Nineteenth Amendment by Claudia Setzer buff.ly/uPvBfh4 #WomensHistorySBL26

10.03.2026 12:45 👍 3 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Public Scholarship: “If We Are Silent and Wait until the Morning Light, We Will Be Found Guilty” 

I started to give talks at local churches and synagogues, and these eventually morphed into invitations to national and international clergy groups. I started to write letters to editors when I encountered texts that promoted anti-Jewish, anti-LBGTQI, anti-Catholic, anti-women, anti-poor, anti-disabled, and even anti-Evangelical views. I still do, whether writing to individual authors in the hopes that they will correct their views, to the editors if the authors refuse, or to ecclesial hierarchy where available when clergy do not correct misinformed and therefore toxic sermons.

—Amy-Jill Levine

Public Scholarship: “If We Are Silent and Wait until the Morning Light, We Will Be Found Guilty” I started to give talks at local churches and synagogues, and these eventually morphed into invitations to national and international clergy groups. I started to write letters to editors when I encountered texts that promoted anti-Jewish, anti-LBGTQI, anti-Catholic, anti-women, anti-poor, anti-disabled, and even anti-Evangelical views. I still do, whether writing to individual authors in the hopes that they will correct their views, to the editors if the authors refuse, or to ecclesial hierarchy where available when clergy do not correct misinformed and therefore toxic sermons. —Amy-Jill Levine

Read "Public Scholarship: 'If We Are Silent and Wait until the Morning Light, We Will Be Found Guilty' (2 Kings 7:9)" by Amy-Jill Levine in Women and the Society of Biblical Literature edited by Nicole L. Tilford buff.ly/vJeUjlW #WomensHistorySBL26

09.03.2026 16:34 👍 1 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Bible and Women covers for Hebrew Bible/Old Testament, New Testament, Apocrypha, and Jewish Interpretation sections. 

https://tinyurl.com/Bible-and-Women

sblpressorders@aidcvt.com

Bible and Women covers for Hebrew Bible/Old Testament, New Testament, Apocrypha, and Jewish Interpretation sections. https://tinyurl.com/Bible-and-Women sblpressorders@aidcvt.com

Bible and Women covers for Middle Ages and Early Modern Era, Era of Reform and Revolution, the So-Called Long Nineteenth Century, and the Contemporary Period sections. 

https://tinyurl.com/Bible-and-Women

sblpressorders@aidcvt.com

Bible and Women covers for Middle Ages and Early Modern Era, Era of Reform and Revolution, the So-Called Long Nineteenth Century, and the Contemporary Period sections. https://tinyurl.com/Bible-and-Women sblpressorders@aidcvt.com

Bible and Women focuses on gender-relevant biblical themes, women in the text, and women interpreters. Volumes are published in German (Kohlhammer), English (SBL Press), Italian (Il Pozzo di Giacobbe), and Spanish (Editorial Verbo Divino). buff.ly/46h0dKn #InternationalWomensDay

08.03.2026 17:01 👍 0 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
It is my observation that throughout the narrative the body functions as a vehicle for communicating ideas and attitudes. The representations of particular bodies and the descriptions of what they do and what others do to them mediate meaning. This insight drives the aim of this study: to interpret the story of Jairus’s daughter with an awareness of the role and function of representations of the body in the first century CE.

—Janine E. Luttick

It is my observation that throughout the narrative the body functions as a vehicle for communicating ideas and attitudes. The representations of particular bodies and the descriptions of what they do and what others do to them mediate meaning. This insight drives the aim of this study: to interpret the story of Jairus’s daughter with an awareness of the role and function of representations of the body in the first century CE. —Janine E. Luttick

Read Jairus’s Daughter and the Female Body in Mark by Janine E. Luttick buff.ly/CpcAOdk

07.03.2026 17:45 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
“In Genesis, I consider how body is related to self, to individual identity in the sense of numerical identity (what makes an individual this person and not that person); my suggestion is that the temporal discontinuities in God’s bodies in Genesis mean that the relation between body and self, or body and individual identity, is in God’s case not the one with which we are most familiar, and therefore not the same relation as the one that is described in our terminology as ‘having a body’ or ‘being embodied.’ And in Job, I consider how having a temporal span seems to be constitutive of what it is to have a body; the book presents this as true of Job’s body but not true of God’s.”
 
—Jennie Grillo

“In Genesis, I consider how body is related to self, to individual identity in the sense of numerical identity (what makes an individual this person and not that person); my suggestion is that the temporal discontinuities in God’s bodies in Genesis mean that the relation between body and self, or body and individual identity, is in God’s case not the one with which we are most familiar, and therefore not the same relation as the one that is described in our terminology as ‘having a body’ or ‘being embodied.’ And in Job, I consider how having a temporal span seems to be constitutive of what it is to have a body; the book presents this as true of Job’s body but not true of God’s.” —Jennie Grillo

Read “On Having a Body: Time and Divine Embodiment" by Jennie Grillo in #JBL144.3. Access the article online using your SBL username and password. tinyurl.com/a6cbyh55. #WomensHistorySBL26

06.03.2026 14:00 👍 3 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
La parte superior derecha de la luneta, de unos 15 cm de altura, se ha perdido. El texto posee 38 líneas, cada una de ellas de una altura de 5 cm. Los signos están orientados hacia la derecha, y la primera línea comienza en la mitad de una oración, lo que hizo suponer la existencia de una primera parte de la estela aún no encontrada
—Roxana Flammini

La parte superior derecha de la luneta, de unos 15 cm de altura, se ha perdido. El texto posee 38 líneas, cada una de ellas de una altura de 5 cm. Los signos están orientados hacia la derecha, y la primera línea comienza en la mitad de una oración, lo que hizo suponer la existencia de una primera parte de la estela aún no encontrada —Roxana Flammini

La Segunda Estela de Kamose: Un estudio integral en contexto by Roxana Flammin is available in open access and print. buff.ly/FMx2jPL #WomensHistorySBL26

05.03.2026 19:02 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Female Power as Liability: The Queen Mother and a
Theodicy of Exile in 1 and 2 Kings

If every queen mother is the foremost of her nation and can lose the position of גבירה as opposed to the status of mother, then the title imbues the mother of the king with a position that the monarchy sanctions.
—Ginny Brewer-Boydston

Female Power as Liability: The Queen Mother and a Theodicy of Exile in 1 and 2 Kings If every queen mother is the foremost of her nation and can lose the position of גבירה as opposed to the status of mother, then the title imbues the mother of the king with a position that the monarchy sanctions. —Ginny Brewer-Boydston

Read "Female Power as Liability: The Queen Mother and a Theodicy of Exile in 1 and 2 Kings" by Ginny Brewer-Boydston in Theology of the Hebrew Bible, Volume 2: Texts, Readers, and Their Worlds edited by Soo Kim Sweeney, David Frankel, and Marvin A. Sweeney. buff.ly/786LICv #WomensHistorySBL26

04.03.2026 19:15 👍 1 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
A Influência de Daniel e Apocalipse na História do
Futuro do Padre António Vieira, SJ

António Vieira, como muitos outros antes dele tenta interpretar os eventos e o tempo a eles associados descritos em Daniel e mais tarde reutilizados em Apocalipse. Apesar de tudo, o conteúdo da História do Futuro de Vieira, mesmo parecendo problemático do ponto de vista da Inquisição, foi considerado como um livro que seguia a ortodoxia da Igreja e que o seu autor era um intérprete soberbo do texto bíblico.
—Ana T. Valdez

A Influência de Daniel e Apocalipse na História do Futuro do Padre António Vieira, SJ António Vieira, como muitos outros antes dele tenta interpretar os eventos e o tempo a eles associados descritos em Daniel e mais tarde reutilizados em Apocalipse. Apesar de tudo, o conteúdo da História do Futuro de Vieira, mesmo parecendo problemático do ponto de vista da Inquisição, foi considerado como um livro que seguia a ortodoxia da Igreja e que o seu autor era um intérprete soberbo do texto bíblico. —Ana T. Valdez

Read "A Influência de Daniel e Apocalipse na História do Futuro do Padre António Vieira, SJ" by Ana T. Valdez in Estudios Iberoamericanos en torno al Judaísmo del Segundo Templo. buff.ly/qscsmtC @manavaldez.bsky.social #WomensHistorySBL26

03.03.2026 18:03 👍 1 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
Bordered Hospitality and “the Least of These”: The Bible as a Tool of Citizenship Excess in the Contemporary US Immigration Crisis

Given the history of US rhetorics, which deeply connect the United States as a nation to biblical Israel, and the histories of settler colonial and imperial violence that have accompanied such rhetorics, a minoritized critic would likely be suspicious of readings that connect a US interpreter too easily to Israel.
—Jacqueline M. Hidalgo

Bordered Hospitality and “the Least of These”: The Bible as a Tool of Citizenship Excess in the Contemporary US Immigration Crisis Given the history of US rhetorics, which deeply connect the United States as a nation to biblical Israel, and the histories of settler colonial and imperial violence that have accompanied such rhetorics, a minoritized critic would likely be suspicious of readings that connect a US interpreter too easily to Israel. —Jacqueline M. Hidalgo

"Bordered Hospitality and 'the Least of These': The Bible as a Tool of Citizenship Excess in the Contemporary US Immigration Crisis" by Jacqueline M. Hidalgo in Reading in These Times: Purposes and Practices of Minoritized Biblical Criticism buff.ly/yq3XgYU #WomensHistorySBL26

02.03.2026 14:32 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

We apologize for the inconvenience. Please reach out to sblpresssales@sbl-site.org.

02.03.2026 14:26 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Political circumstances alone explain neither the obsession of Judahite scribes with Davidic-Israelite interaction nor the need to forge a Judahite identity and ideology vis-à-vis Israel. There is no way to escape the conclusion that Israelite politics and by extension Israelite identity were a matter of importance in the Davidic court long before the fall of Samaria. Why was this so?

—Omer Sergi

Political circumstances alone explain neither the obsession of Judahite scribes with Davidic-Israelite interaction nor the need to forge a Judahite identity and ideology vis-à-vis Israel. There is no way to escape the conclusion that Israelite politics and by extension Israelite identity were a matter of importance in the Davidic court long before the fall of Samaria. Why was this so? —Omer Sergi

The ebook of The Two Houses of Israel: State Formation and the Origins of Pan-Israelite Identity by Omer Sergi is $5 today. Use code ARCH26 at checkout. buff.ly/B2evZ9c

02.03.2026 01:29 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
During the eighth century BCE, female fertility figurines appeared for the first time, a specific. type known as the Judean Pillar Figurine. Fertility figurines appear in the Levant beginning with the Neolithic period, and in Iron Age II such figurines are well-known at Philistine sites and in the kingdom of Israel.
—Yosef Garfinkel

During the eighth century BCE, female fertility figurines appeared for the first time, a specific. type known as the Judean Pillar Figurine. Fertility figurines appear in the Levant beginning with the Neolithic period, and in Iron Age II such figurines are well-known at Philistine sites and in the kingdom of Israel. —Yosef Garfinkel

The Archaeology of the Kingdom of Judah by Yosef Garfinkel is $5 today with code ARCH26 through 1 March. buff.ly/xFLHzbx

01.03.2026 22:33 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
In the biblical text, the participation of Judah in the Arabian trade under Assyrian hegemony is probably represented by the tale of the queen of Sheba’s visit to King Solomon in Jerusalem (Finkelstein and Silberman 2006a, 167–71).

—Israel Finkelstein

In the biblical text, the participation of Judah in the Arabian trade under Assyrian hegemony is probably represented by the tale of the queen of Sheba’s visit to King Solomon in Jerusalem (Finkelstein and Silberman 2006a, 167–71). —Israel Finkelstein

Get the ebook of Jerusalem the Center of the Universe: Its Archaeology and History (1800–100 BCE) by Israel Finkelstien for $5 today with code ARCH26. buff.ly/eUCI5IW

01.03.2026 21:00 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Adriaen van der Werff, The Expulsion of Hagar and Ishmael (detail), ca. 1699, oil on canvas, 77 x 62 cm. Courtesy the RISD Musuem.

Adriaen van der Werff, The Expulsion of Hagar and Ishmael (detail), ca. 1699, oil on canvas, 77 x 62 cm. Courtesy the RISD Musuem.

How and when did divorce take place in ancient Israel? Find out in Divorce in the Hebrew Bible by Eve Levavi Feinstein buff.ly/SeBeDlC #WomensHIstoryMonth

01.03.2026 17:01 👍 1 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Miss Piggy and the Pretty Woman of Proverbs 11:22: Beauty, Animality, and Gender

Keeping the connection alive between the adorned pig and the pretty woman brings forth many fruitful interpretative possibilities. I offer to go beyond the tendency to limit the meaning of a proverb to its parallelistic structure in order to consider appositional tensions as well as reversible metaphors at play.
—Anne Létourneau

Miss Piggy and the Pretty Woman of Proverbs 11:22: Beauty, Animality, and Gender Keeping the connection alive between the adorned pig and the pretty woman brings forth many fruitful interpretative possibilities. I offer to go beyond the tendency to limit the meaning of a proverb to its parallelistic structure in order to consider appositional tensions as well as reversible metaphors at play. —Anne Létourneau

Check out "Miss Piggy and the Pretty Woman of Proverbs 11:22: Beauty, Animality, and Gender" by Anne Létourneau in Ask the Animals: Developing a Biblical Animal Hermeneutic edited by Arthur W. Walker-Jones, Suzanna R. Millar. buff.ly/USlwpnC #WomensHistorySBL26

01.03.2026 13:45 👍 3 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
Two questions regarding the developmental timeline and local usage of writing and literacy are particularly relevant to the current discussion of state formation in Israel and Judah. The first has to do with when linear alphabetic writing was initially used in the royal courts of Israel and Judah as anm administrative tool meant to normalize political hegemony. The second concerns when and how it was used for producing intellectual and literary works.

—Omer Sergi

Two questions regarding the developmental timeline and local usage of writing and literacy are particularly relevant to the current discussion of state formation in Israel and Judah. The first has to do with when linear alphabetic writing was initially used in the royal courts of Israel and Judah as anm administrative tool meant to normalize political hegemony. The second concerns when and how it was used for producing intellectual and literary works. —Omer Sergi

Get the ebook of The Two Houses of Israel: State Formation and the Origins of Pan-Israelite Identity by Omer Sergi is $5 today and tomorrow. Use code ARCH26 at checkout. buff.ly/B2evZ9c

01.03.2026 01:34 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
The innovation in the eighth century BCE is the appearance of inscribed administrative seals. It attests to the emergence of a circle of educated officials in the kingdom who carried seals inscribed with their names. While many seals from the eighth century BCE were decorated with an iconographic symbol, the private seals on the royal lmlk jar handles are without decoration.

—Yosef Garfinkel

The innovation in the eighth century BCE is the appearance of inscribed administrative seals. It attests to the emergence of a circle of educated officials in the kingdom who carried seals inscribed with their names. While many seals from the eighth century BCE were decorated with an iconographic symbol, the private seals on the royal lmlk jar handles are without decoration. —Yosef Garfinkel

Get the ebook of The Archaeology of the Kingdom of Judah by Yosef Garfinkel for $5 with code ARCH26 through 1 March. buff.ly/xFLHzbx

28.02.2026 22:49 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Although the Large Stone Structure reaches close to the top edge of the Stepped Stone Structure, no clear-cut, physical connection between the two structures has been established. Also, it is doubtful whether such a connection—if it existed at all—can be established, as the present top of the Stepped Stone Structure seems to be a modern restoration. As will be discussed below, the Stepped Stone Structure seems to represent more than one phase of construction, with its upper part probably dating to the Hellenistic period, if not later.
—Israel Finkelstein

Although the Large Stone Structure reaches close to the top edge of the Stepped Stone Structure, no clear-cut, physical connection between the two structures has been established. Also, it is doubtful whether such a connection—if it existed at all—can be established, as the present top of the Stepped Stone Structure seems to be a modern restoration. As will be discussed below, the Stepped Stone Structure seems to represent more than one phase of construction, with its upper part probably dating to the Hellenistic period, if not later. —Israel Finkelstein

The ebook of Jerusalem the Center of the Universe: Its Archaeology and History (1800–100 BCE) by Israel Finkelstien is $5 today and tomorrow with code ARCH26. buff.ly/eUCI5IW

28.02.2026 21:30 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
The scope of this project is limited to the distinctiveness of socioeconomic and religious transgressions in Micah’s oracles and how these chains of preserved traditions equip contemporary readers and communities of readers in their struggle and resistance against socioeconomic and religious contradictions.
—Blessing Onoriode Boloje

The scope of this project is limited to the distinctiveness of socioeconomic and religious transgressions in Micah’s oracles and how these chains of preserved traditions equip contemporary readers and communities of readers in their struggle and resistance against socioeconomic and religious contradictions. —Blessing Onoriode Boloje

Reading Micah in Nigeria: Ethics, Wealth, and Corruption by Blessing Onoriode Boloje. The book is open access and print in the International Voices in Biblical Studies series. buff.ly/EiXnjJR #BlackHistorySBL26

28.02.2026 16:45 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
The name Israel in the phrase “king of Israel,” which appears in both the Mesha Inscription and the Tel Dan Stela, does not specify what exactly this Israel was but only that it was ruled by a king. In light of the fact that within the same period another king from the same dynasty, Ahab, is referred to as an “Israelite,” it may well have been that Israel was still the name of a kinship group, even if by the ninth century BCE its usage extended well beyond the group that the scribes of Merenptah identified as Israel 350 years earlier.

—Omer Sergi

The name Israel in the phrase “king of Israel,” which appears in both the Mesha Inscription and the Tel Dan Stela, does not specify what exactly this Israel was but only that it was ruled by a king. In light of the fact that within the same period another king from the same dynasty, Ahab, is referred to as an “Israelite,” it may well have been that Israel was still the name of a kinship group, even if by the ninth century BCE its usage extended well beyond the group that the scribes of Merenptah identified as Israel 350 years earlier. —Omer Sergi

Check out the ebook of The Two Houses of Israel: State Formation and the Origins of Pan-Israelite Identity by Omer Sergi for $5 through 1 March. Use code ARCH26 at checkout. buff.ly/B2evZ9c

28.02.2026 01:38 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Scholars of the minimalist school attribute great significance to Judah’s absence in the inscriptions of Mesha and Shalmaneser III, citing it as evidence that Judah was not yet a kingdom during the ninth century BCE. There is a clear methodological fault here: instead of examining archaeological data in the kingdom of Judah, they reach conclusions based upon its absence in inscriptions of foreign kings who did not have a common border with Judah. This is a clear case in which the absence of evidence is taken as evidence of absence.
—Yosef Garfinkel

Scholars of the minimalist school attribute great significance to Judah’s absence in the inscriptions of Mesha and Shalmaneser III, citing it as evidence that Judah was not yet a kingdom during the ninth century BCE. There is a clear methodological fault here: instead of examining archaeological data in the kingdom of Judah, they reach conclusions based upon its absence in inscriptions of foreign kings who did not have a common border with Judah. This is a clear case in which the absence of evidence is taken as evidence of absence. —Yosef Garfinkel

The ebook of The Archaeology of the Kingdom of Judah by Yosef Garfinkel is $5 with code ARCH26 through 1 March. buff.ly/xFLHzbx

27.02.2026 23:02 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
The takeover of Jerusalem (impossible to know from whom) enabled Saul to expand to the south as far as the Hebron Highlands and to the border with Gath, the major city-state of the Shephelah. At a certain stage, he seems to have managed to extend his activity to the upper Shephelah. Khirbet Qeiyafa could have been built as a stronghold facing Gath (Finkelstein and Fantalkin 2012).
—Israel Finkelstein

The takeover of Jerusalem (impossible to know from whom) enabled Saul to expand to the south as far as the Hebron Highlands and to the border with Gath, the major city-state of the Shephelah. At a certain stage, he seems to have managed to extend his activity to the upper Shephelah. Khirbet Qeiyafa could have been built as a stronghold facing Gath (Finkelstein and Fantalkin 2012). —Israel Finkelstein

Through 1 March, get the ebook of Jerusalem the Center of the Universe: Its Archaeology and History (1800–100 BCE) by Israel Finkelstien for $5 with code ARCH26. buff.ly/eUCI5IW

27.02.2026 20:39 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
“It is imperative that we recognize, even if belatedly, those few black pioneers of the decades before the initiatives of Hoyt and Waters—the likes of Leon Edward Wright; Charles B. Copher; G. Murray Branch; and Joseph A. Johnson. We must inscribe them and a few others into our full organizational consciousness and memory. These few are no longer with us; they have yet to be fully claimed and recognized. They struggled mightily to figure out how to speak to the challenges and pressures of the different worlds they intersected as black male intellectuals on the peripheries of the field.” 
—Vincent L. Wimbush

“It is imperative that we recognize, even if belatedly, those few black pioneers of the decades before the initiatives of Hoyt and Waters—the likes of Leon Edward Wright; Charles B. Copher; G. Murray Branch; and Joseph A. Johnson. We must inscribe them and a few others into our full organizational consciousness and memory. These few are no longer with us; they have yet to be fully claimed and recognized. They struggled mightily to figure out how to speak to the challenges and pressures of the different worlds they intersected as black male intellectuals on the peripheries of the field.” —Vincent L. Wimbush

Access Vincent L. Wimbush's Presidential Address, “Interpreters—Enslaving/Enslaved/Runagate” in JBL 130.1. buff.ly/Z66VcDy #BlackHistorySBL26

27.02.2026 13:52 👍 6 🔁 4 💬 0 📌 0
The shift in the historical and archaeological research on early monarchic Israel went hand in hand with major shifts in the biblical studies field: long-standing paradigms regarding the formation of the Pentateuch and the Former Prophets were dismissed in the face of new and bold models.
—Omer Sergi

The shift in the historical and archaeological research on early monarchic Israel went hand in hand with major shifts in the biblical studies field: long-standing paradigms regarding the formation of the Pentateuch and the Former Prophets were dismissed in the face of new and bold models. —Omer Sergi

Through 1 March, the ebook of The Two Houses of Israel: State Formation and the Origins of Pan-Israelite Identity by Omer Sergi is $5 with code ARCH26. buff.ly/B2evZ9c

27.02.2026 01:42 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
The kingdom existed for about 420 years, from the early tenth century to the first half of the sixth century BCE. According to some approaches, Judah existed for only half of that time, from the eighth to the early sixth century BCE. Despite Judah’s small size and its marginal location, it became a landmark in the development of human culture. This was due to its key role in the Hebrew Bible, but also to its capital city Jerusalem becoming holy in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
—Yosef Garfinkel

The kingdom existed for about 420 years, from the early tenth century to the first half of the sixth century BCE. According to some approaches, Judah existed for only half of that time, from the eighth to the early sixth century BCE. Despite Judah’s small size and its marginal location, it became a landmark in the development of human culture. This was due to its key role in the Hebrew Bible, but also to its capital city Jerusalem becoming holy in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. —Yosef Garfinkel

Through 1 March, the ebook of The Archaeology of the Kingdom of Judah by Yosef Garfinkel is $5 with code ARCH26. buff.ly/xFLHzbx

27.02.2026 00:30 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
The geographical backdrop of the book is the old part of the city of Jerusalem, which is composed of three components: the Temple Mount; the City of David ridge to its south, with the Gihon Spring on its eastern slope; and the southwestern ridge, mainly the Armenian and Jewish Quarters of today’s Old City

—Israel Finkelstein

The geographical backdrop of the book is the old part of the city of Jerusalem, which is composed of three components: the Temple Mount; the City of David ridge to its south, with the Gihon Spring on its eastern slope; and the southwestern ridge, mainly the Armenian and Jewish Quarters of today’s Old City —Israel Finkelstein

Through 1 March, the ebook of Jerusalem the Center of the Universe: Its Archaeology and History (1800–100 BCE) by Israel Finkelstien is $5 with code ARCH26. cart.sbl-site.org/books/069033E

26.02.2026 23:00 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Archaeology Flash Sale
Through 1 March, purchase these ebooks or $5.00 each with Code ARCH26 from SBL Press 
Jerusalem the Center of the Universe: Its Archaeology and History (1800–100 BCE), 
The Archaeology of the Kingdom of Judah, The Two Houses of Israel: State Formation and the Origins of Pan-Israelite Identity

Archaeology Flash Sale Through 1 March, purchase these ebooks or $5.00 each with Code ARCH26 from SBL Press Jerusalem the Center of the Universe: Its Archaeology and History (1800–100 BCE), The Archaeology of the Kingdom of Judah, The Two Houses of Israel: State Formation and the Origins of Pan-Israelite Identity

Purchase the ebooks of Jerusalem the Center of the Universe: Its Archaeology and History (1800–100 BCE), The Archaeology of the Kingdom of Judah, and The Two Houses of Israel: State Formation and the Origins of Pan-Israelite Identity for $5.00 each with Code ARCH26 through 1 March. buff.ly/XosEuoX

26.02.2026 20:30 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
“Colonialism never goes without a translation transcript. A colonial context is a translation zone that seeks to translate the Other into its image. The plot, from ancient to missionary and post-missionary translation, is widely attested. Beginning with the Septuagint and continuing to the modern nineteenth-century and current neoliberal context, Bible translation has thrived through and within the context of empirical structures, ideologies, and impact.”

“Colonialism never goes without a translation transcript. A colonial context is a translation zone that seeks to translate the Other into its image. The plot, from ancient to missionary and post-missionary translation, is widely attested. Beginning with the Septuagint and continuing to the modern nineteenth-century and current neoliberal context, Bible translation has thrived through and within the context of empirical structures, ideologies, and impact.”

Access Musa W. Dube's Presidential Address “Behold, the Global Translated Bible(s)! Research and Pedagogical Implications.” JBL 143.1 buff.ly/0I348gn #BlackHistorySBL26

26.02.2026 14:02 👍 1 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0