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Torah, Paideia, and Sophia in Ben Sira

  • Jean-Louis Ska
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Abstract

This essay is an inquiry into the possibility of comparing the book of Ben Sira with Hellenistic projects of paideia. The idea is that Ben Sira wrote a kind of “handbook” for the education of young members of educated families following a Greek model proposed by the Hellenistic world. Ben Sira seems to suggest that it is possible to educate young people in the same way as it is done in the Hellenistic world and that Israel’s traditions, the Torah in particular, contain all the necessary elements for this purpose. “We too,” Ben Sira would say, “have an old and rich educative tradition and we do not have to go to Greece or to Alexandria to find the necessary tools.”

Abstract

This essay is an inquiry into the possibility of comparing the book of Ben Sira with Hellenistic projects of paideia. The idea is that Ben Sira wrote a kind of “handbook” for the education of young members of educated families following a Greek model proposed by the Hellenistic world. Ben Sira seems to suggest that it is possible to educate young people in the same way as it is done in the Hellenistic world and that Israel’s traditions, the Torah in particular, contain all the necessary elements for this purpose. “We too,” Ben Sira would say, “have an old and rich educative tradition and we do not have to go to Greece or to Alexandria to find the necessary tools.”

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Preface vii
  3. Contents ix
  4. Introduction 1
  5. Select Bibliography 7
  6. Contributors 13
  7. Part I: Ben Sira in Conversation with the Torah
  8. The Creation of Humanity in HebrewWisdom Literature of the Second Century BCE 17
  9. Torah, Paideia, and Sophia in Ben Sira 35
  10. Ben Sira’s Portrayal of Aaron and Phinehas (Sir 45:6–25): An Interaction between Tradition and Innovation 51
  11. “Do Not Defraud the Life of the Poor”: Notes on the Greek of Sir 4:1–10 65
  12. Part II: Ben Sira in Conversation with the Prophets
  13. Ben Sira and Ezekiel 79
  14. “Bread to the Hungry and Clothes to the Naked”: A History of a Prophetic- Sapiential Motif from Tobit to the Syriac of Ben Sira 95
  15. The Metaphor of a Woman Giving Birth: The Book of Ben Sira in the Light of Prophetic Literature 109
  16. Banquet of Life in Ben Sira and Hosea: Intertextual Links between Sir 24:12–23 and Hos 14:5–10 123
  17. Part III: Ben Sira in Conversation with Wisdom Traditions
  18. “Yet, No One Remembered that Poor Man”: Qoheleth and Ben Sira on the Wisdom of the Poor 147
  19. Living with Wild Animals: A Study of the Imagery in Sir 25:15–16 165
  20. Keywords: women/wives, animal imagery, metaphors, Ben Sira, anger 177
  21. Family Ethos and Wise Behavior in Proverbs, Sirach, and Vietnamese Folk Sayings 191
  22. Part IV: Ben Sira in Coversation with Some of the Literature of the Second Temple
  23. Jerusalem in the Books of Tobit and Ben Sira 215
  24. Wisdom in Disguise and the Heroism of Widows: Ben Sira and Judean Traditions (Sir 4:1–19) 235
  25. Path Dependence and Institutional Change: The Portrayal of Alcimus and Jonathan as High Priests in 1 Maccabees 249
  26. A Devilish Parallel: Sir 15:14 in its Hebrew Reception 267
  27. Part V: Later Authors in Conversation with the Book of Ben Sira
  28. The Book of Ben Sira From a Reception- Historical Perspective: Hubert Frankemölle’s Commentary on the Letter of James 283
  29. Quick to Listen, Slow to Speak, and Slow to Anger (Jas 1:19 and Sir 5:11) 301
  30. Reliability and Gentleness: Moses, Jesus, and the Disciple 321
  31. “Useful for Instruction”: The Popularity of Sirach in Christian Egypt 337
  32. M. H. Segal (1875–1968) and his Abiding Interest in Ben Sira 351
  33. Index of References 371
  34. Index of Authors 381
Heruntergeladen am 8.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110762181-004/html
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