Yochanan Muffs

Yochanan Muffs (June 3, 1932 - December 6, 2009) was an American professor of the Bible and religion at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York City.

Biography

Muffs grew up in a Conservative Jewish home in Flushing, Queens. His parents were Barney and Mary Muffs. Muffs had one sister, Civia, an artist. He did his undergraduate degree in Humanities at Queens College and studied for the rabbinate at the Jewish Theological Seminary, where he began teaching in 1954. He pursued his Ph.D. in Near Eastern studies at the University of Pennsylvania.[1]

Muffs married Yocheved Herschlag in 1970.[2] He succumbed to Parkinson's disease, from which he suffered for many decades.[3]

Academic career

Muffs made major contributions in biblical studies, Semitic languages, the history of the ancient Near East, and Jewish religion and thought. He strove to reach an understanding of biblical text through comparative philological study.[4] His first book, Studies in the Aramaic Legal Papyri from Elephantine, published in 1969, has been described as a "watershed work." Muffs analyzed legal documents from a colony of Jewish families in fifth century BCE, using comparative evidence from Mesopotamian, Egyptian, Jewish and other legal sources to further understanding of life in those days.[5] David Hartman, founder of the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem, described Muffs as a "master of midrashic analysis whose rich theological imagination reveals the gripping realism of the biblical God and the intensity of God’s relationship to human history."[6] In Love and Joy: Law, Language and Religion in Ancient Israel, Muffs writes about the core task of the prophet in the Israelite tradition: The Israelite prophet is given explicit directions from God, but is also "an independent advocate...attempting to mitigate the severity of the decree." [7] In his review of The Personhood of God, Bishop Krister Stendahl of Harvard Divinity School says the book "embraces unashamedly the ways the Bible pictures God as a person with all the traits of human psychology and even anatomy...and shows convincingly how it enriches both faith and theology, not least by liberating the readers from the stultifying literal readings of the sacred texts." [8]

Muffs was a fellow of the American Academy of Jewish Research.[9]

Ideas

In his essay “Who Will Stand in the Breach?” Muffs explores the role of the biblical prophet, whom he describes as a scolder but also a defender of the people. When God wants to destroy Israel for creating the golden calf, Moses confronts God. When Samuel is ordered to divest Saul of his kingship, he appeals to God all night. According to Muffs, intimacy with God means standing up to God.[10]

In the Personhood of God, Muffs studies the anthropomorphic evolution of God, from creator of the cosmos to God the father, God the husband, God the king, God the “chess-player," and God the ultimate master. The book further examines how expressions of divine power, divine will and divine love in the Bible have impacted on the contemporary human condition.[11]

Published works

  • Studies in the Aramaic Legal Papyri from Elephantine
  • Love and Joy: Law, Language, and Religion in Ancient Israel[12]
  • The Personhood of God: Biblical Theology, Human Faith And the Divine Image ISBN 978-1-58023-338-5 [13]
gollark: So in theory (I said this to them, and apparently I wouldn't have enough time to cheat so it didn't matter, which would have been wrong as I in fact had lots of spare time) you could access the internet by manually sending HTTP requests from python and parsing the HTML, yes.
gollark: They "block internet access" by stopping the browsers opening. However, we can access python for obvious reasons, and python has built-in HTTP libraries.
gollark: Talking of great exam systems, I had a computer science exam today at school, and they do them partly on computers (nobody wants to write code on paper).
gollark: Nobody seemed to care or notice when someone found that Intel's ring interconnect thing was usable for similar covert channel stuff *and* actual side channel attacks.
gollark: As the article says, they had a ton of similar issues *anyway*, probably from using existing ARM stuff.

See also

References

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