رکورد قبلیرکورد بعدی

" Zekhut Imahot: "


Document Type : AL
Record Number : 1075432
Doc. No : LA119061
Call No : ‭10.1163/15700631-12491201‬
Language of Document : English
Main Entry : Sarit Kattan Gribetz
Title & Author : Zekhut Imahot: [Article] : Mothers, Fathers, and Ancestral Merit in Rabbinic Sources\ Sarit Kattan Gribetz
Publication Statement : Leiden: Brill
Title of Periodical : Journal for the Study of Judaism
Date : 2018
Volume/ Issue Number : 49/2
Page No : 263–296
Abstract : Rabbinic sources develop the theological concept of ancestral merit, the idea that the merits of parents, especially fore-parents, continue to offer their descendants favor in the eyes of God. The term zekhut avot is often translated as “merit of the fathers.” In this article, I ask: to whom does “avot,” in the term zekhut avot, refer? I argue that the concept of zekhut avot encompassed the biblical matriarchs in addition to the patriarchs, though this fact has often gone unnoticed or been deemphasized in modern scholarship, and that the terms “maʿaseh imahot” and “zekhut imahot” appear alongside “maʿaseh avot” and “zekhut avot” in the sources. I argue further that the figure of Rachel stands most prominently among the matriarchs whose merit assists her descendants, parallel to Abraham’s binding of Isaac as the paradigmatic event that accrued patriarchal merit. I conclude by offering historical and literary reasons for this development in rabbinic sources. Rabbinic sources develop the theological concept of ancestral merit, the idea that the merits of parents, especially fore-parents, continue to offer their descendants favor in the eyes of God. The term zekhut avot is often translated as “merit of the fathers.” In this article, I ask: to whom does “avot,” in the term zekhut avot, refer? I argue that the concept of zekhut avot encompassed the biblical matriarchs in addition to the patriarchs, though this fact has often gone unnoticed or been deemphasized in modern scholarship, and that the terms “maʿaseh imahot” and “zekhut imahot” appear alongside “maʿaseh avot” and “zekhut avot” in the sources. I argue further that the figure of Rachel stands most prominently among the matriarchs whose merit assists her descendants, parallel to Abraham’s binding of Isaac as the paradigmatic event that accrued patriarchal merit. I conclude by offering historical and literary reasons for this development in rabbinic sources.
Descriptor : ancestral merit
Descriptor : fathers
Descriptor : Mary
Descriptor : matriarchs
Descriptor : midrash
Descriptor : mothers
Descriptor : patriarchs
Descriptor : rabbis
Descriptor : Rachel
Descriptor : Talmud
Location & Call number : ‭10.1163/15700631-12491201‬
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10.1163-15700631-12491201_23990.pdf
10.1163-15700631-12491201.pdf
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