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06-25-2013, 08:04 AM | #31 | ||||
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Since the terms Aggadah and Haggadah are easy to confuse, it seems Midrash Aggadah is used in the vast majority of cases where it comes up. For example, in Midrash, we see Quote:
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06-30-2013, 09:21 PM | #32 | |
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07-05-2013, 06:20 PM | #33 |
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So long as everyone understands that midrash refers to the construction of the NT out of the OT, then there shouldn't be any problem with borrowing a technical term from one field and using it in another.
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07-05-2013, 08:01 PM | #34 | |
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Aggadah [əgəˈda]Technically, the Passover Seder is a collection of aggadot (or haggadot), but it has come to be known colloquially as "the Haggadah." Most modern Jews only know the Haggadah as the Seder stories, and afaik in modern Hebrew the two words have non-overlapping meanings, as you stated. So someone who has studied Rabbinic Judaism (Orthodox or Conservative) might well use the two words interchangeably. just sayin. |
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07-07-2013, 06:22 PM | #35 | |
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In a series of posts I once wrote addressing this question I relied most heavily on what Jewish scholars, specialists in Jewish literature, had to say about midrash and whether or not the NT gospels can be classified as midrash:
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07-31-2013, 09:21 AM | #36 |
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I have been interested in knowing how Samaritan tradition addresses the issue of the total silence in all the Tanakh scriptures of the Samuel and Kings about the existence of a separate community worshiping at Mt. Gerizim from the time of a separation of Eli the High Priest, but have never been able to nail down their explanation. I am told that they believe that the northern tribes were divided between followers of the practices of Jeroboam son of Nevat and his successors and followers of Mt. Gerizim, plus some Israelites who practiced paganism of the Canaanites.
However, nowhere in those books of Tanakh is there the slightest mention of a sect worshiping at Mt. Gerizim before the last kings of the northern tribes. In fact, the book of kings explicitly mentions a time when the northern tribes WERE divided between Omri and Tivni for several years (not to mention when Judah/Benjamin were divided between David and Saul and then Mephiboshet. This suggests that in fact there was no Israelite worshippers who revered Mt. Gerizim instead of Shilo and Jerusalem. The Tanakh regularly mentions those who do not follow the regular path, whether that be the sons of Eli, subsequent leaders and kings, etc. |
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