Midrashic hermeneutical resources

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Ancient and pre-modern sources who make use of midrashic hermeneutical methodologies[edit | edit source]

  • The "midrashic" label used on this page originates from the work of Chazal, the Jewish sages responsible for the Mishnah, Midrash, and Talmud
  • Patristic:
    • The hymns of Ephrem the Syrian often interweave symbols from different parts of Scripture in insightful ways.
  • Rishonim
    • Sometimes Rashi. Rabbi David Fohrman has a theory that Rashi alternates between two entirely different approaches in his commentary, and it is important to know which you are dealing with. When his contemporary readers would need help with the peshat layer of the text, e.g. meanings of archaic Hebrew words, he supplies that. But with texts that are already easy to understand on your own he goes deeper, introducing you to the world of midrash by alluding to the stories, pointing to the gunpowder and trigger, etc.
    • Rabbeinu Bachya is one of the more frequent users of midrashic materials (as per ChatGPT)
    • Ramban frequently interacts with the actual Midrash texts, but more from an analytical perspective
  • Puritan "flavoring." Although the Puritans don't generally tend to engage in full on midrashic-style interpretation, they do nevertheless frequently make micro-usage of it in colorful illustrations that add spice and memorability to their writings, for example:
    • "The tree of the cross being cast into the waters of affliction hath rendered them wholesome and medicinal."[1]
  • Relatively recent precursors:
    • Hermann L. Strack and Paul Billerbeck’s Commentary on the New Testament from the Talmud and Midrash from the 1920s precedes our classification of the modern midrashic hermeneutical reformation.
    • "It is difficult to give a precise date for the inception of the literary approach to biblical study. Many 20th century scholars incorporated elements of this method in their work, including Martin Buber, Franz Rosensweig, Benno Jacob, Umberto Cassuto, and Nehama Leibowitz. More recently though, scholars such as Adele Berlin, Michael Fishbane, Meir Sternberg, and Robert Alter can be credited as the first to fully embody the literary approach as defined above. With Alter being the most well-known of the group, let’s examine his approach.
      In his seminal work, The Art of Biblical Narrative, Alter [1981] argues that the literary structure and unity of the Torah indicate a deliberate authorial intent..."[2]

Modern sources who make use of midrashic hermeneutical methodologies[edit | edit source]

The modern midrashic hermeneutical reformation page may contain examples or quotes from sources not catalogued here.

  • Orthodox Jewish:
    • Rabbi David Fohrman and team at https://alephbeta.org. The animated videos provide a well-suited introduction to the methodology for both Biblical scholar and school-aged child alike. The podcasts (e.g. A Book Like No Other) and seminar courses (in some cases available only to patron members) are as deep and profound as anything you will find in the academic literature. He also has excellent books available.
    • Yonatan Grossman (teaching in Hebrew), a professor of Bible at Bar Ilan University and Herzog College[2]
  • Messianic:
  • Protestant Evangelical and/or Reformed:
    • James B. Jordan and theological heirs:
    • Greg Beale:
      • His (NIGTC) Commentary on Revelation provides an encyclopedia of literary and theological connections between John's Apocalypse and Tanakh, as well as with other Judaic sources including Midrash, Talmud, Targums, etc.
      • "The Temple and the Church's Mission" explores the symbolism of Israel's Temple/Tabernacle and how that applies to the mission (not the architecture!) of the church
    • Meredith Kline's "Kingdom Prologue" (especially if packaged together with Beale's "Temple and ... Mission") is, in some ways, a more densely-packed, seminary-level version of Jordan's Through New Eyes (and indeed is cited in Jordan's Bibliography)
    • "Forward and Reverse Gematria are Very Different Beasts," a 2024 peer-reviewed research article by Bible Wiki User:Zekeriya, proposes to resolve the 666 gematria/isopsephy problem of Revelation 13:18 using hermeneutical methods (esp. intertextuality) with heavy indebtedness credited to Fohrman and Beale
    • BibleProject™ makes use of some midrashic tools (often implicitly), e.g. when talking about intertextual "hyperlinks"
    • Bob Wern @thedustyfeet has numerous derivative supercommentary videos following on AlephBeta and BibleProject resources
  • Islamic
  • Cross-pollination
    • (Catholic) Bishop Robert Barron and (Eastern Orthodox) Jonathan Pageau discuss Recognizing Patterns and symbolism in Scripture.
    • (EO) Pageau and (Protestant) Roberts also engaged in a Rediscovery of Symbolism cross-stream chat.

Tools and resources to facilitate learning and using such hermeneutical methods[edit | edit source]

  • https://mg.alhatorah.org/TanakhLab is a useful for intertextual studies
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talmudical_hermeneutics
  • Fohrman's "The Seven Habits of Highly Intuitive Readers of the Bible" Course
  • Fohrman's "Midrash Methodology" Course
  • Beale's "Handbook on the New Testament use of the Old Testament" provides interpretive principles with some sample case studies
  • André Houssney has a three part series on Biblical symbolism melding the benefits of Eastern and Western interpretive perspectives
  • Rabbi/Mathematician Elie Feder's Gematria Refigured rescues this ancient tool from many of the naive or abusive uses it has been put through which have tended to give it a reputation in the eyes of many thoughtful and careful exegetes. His work greatly helps set gematria science back on a more firm foundation by providing both persuasive examples and by drawing general interpretive principles from those examples.
  • AI is capable of contributing helpful insights to prompts that guide it towards a novel synthesis of known/established ideas. (Indeed, it is surprisingly better at that sort of task than at some mundane tasks such as its infamous foul up at counting the number of "r"s in the word "strawberry.") With just a little bit of direction it can "see" connections that you suggest, even if those particular associations have not been presented in any existing literature. So its potential as a chavruta partner for midrashic exegetical research should not be underestimated. Here is one example provided by a student in an AlephBeta class: https://chatgpt.com/share/67c0116d-1aa4-8005-9f64-c0431105e27c.
  • If you are asking yourself, "Is anyone seeing the same amazing things in the Bible that I am?" check out the midrashic hermeneutical discussion communities page for leads on other like-minded people to talk to!

Additional potential leads (yet to be confirmed for relevance and categorized by Bible Wiki editors...)[edit | edit source]

  • Eugene Borowitz - Talmud's Theological Wordgame
  • Max Kudushan - Rabbinic Thinking and Organic Thinking
  • Sources Rabbi David Fohrman has mentioned:
    • Robert Alter, The Art of Biblical Poetry
    • Michlelet Herzog and Herzog College
    • "The work that we're doing here at Aleph Beta in Tanach, there's other people across the globe that are doing similar kinds of work. Some focus in the Gush in Machon Herzog are, but not just in the Gush. I just had a chareidi fellow over here in Jerusalem giving talks to Chevron and to Ponevezh and he stumbled upon this himself. It's in the air. People are going to find it because the age is right for it."
    • Rabbi Menachem Leibtag
  • David Daube
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hillel_Bakis
  • Richard Hays has two "echoes" books and "Reading the Bible Intertextually"
  • Brent Strawn mentions Ross Wagner and says that "David Lincicum has a great new book coming out" (regarding intertextual activations). He also speaks about taking a course from Ulrich Mauser in which the main thesis was that any symbol you find in Revelation is not de novo but originates in the Old Testament or Jewish intertestamental literature.
  • BEMA podcast

References[edit | edit source]

  1. John Owen, Pneumatologia, Book IV, Chap 4, pg 447.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Curwin, David. "The Orthodox Literary Approach: Opening Doors and Closing Gaps." https://dafaleph.com. Cited Feb 2, 2025.