Jacob Milgrom (; February 1, 1923 â June 5, 2010) was a prominent American Jewish Bible scholar and Conservative rabbi. Milgrom's major contribution to biblical research was in the field of cult and worship. Although he accepted the documentary hypothesis, contrary to the classical bible critics, he traced a direct line of development from the Priestly Code (P), to the Holiness Code (H), to the cultic innovations of Ezekiel, to the cultic writings of the Dead Sea sect and finally to Jewish law (halacha) of the Mishnah and Talmud. Best known for his comprehensive Torah commentaries and work on the Dead Sea Scrolls, he also published extensively on the Book of Ezekiel.
Biography
Jacob Milgrom was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1923. He studied at Brooklyn College and the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in New York City. In 1948, he married Jo Berman, also a biblical scholar. They had four children.
Academic career
Jacob Milgrom spent most of his career at the University of California, Berkeley, where he headed the Department of Near Eastern Studies. He was known for his research on Biblical purity laws and on the book of Leviticus.
After retiring in 1994, Milgrom and his wife Jo immigrated to Israel. He died in Jerusalem in June 2010.
Published works
Books
- Studies in Levitical Terminology. Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1970. .
- Studies in Cultic Theology and Terminology. E.J. Brill, 1983. .
- Pomegranates and Golden Bells: Studies in Biblical, Jewish, and Near Eastern Ritual, Law, and Literature. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1995. .
- The JPS Torah Commentary: Numbers. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society, 1996. .
- Leviticus 1-16. New York: Anchor Bible, 1998. .
- Leviticus 17âÂÂ22. New York: Anchor Bible, 2000. .
- Leviticus 23âÂÂ27. New York: Anchor Bible, 2000. .
- Leviticus: A Book of Ritual and Ethics. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2004. .
- Ezekiel's Hope: A Commentary on Ezekiel 38 - 48, with Daniel I. Block. Eugene: Cascade Books, 2012. .
Articles
- âÂÂThe Biblical Diet Laws as an Ethical System.â Interpretation. (July 1963).
- âÂÂThe Alleged WaveâÂÂOffering in Israel and in the Ancient Near East.â Israel Exploration Journal. 22 (1972): 33âÂÂ38.
- âÂÂAtonement in the OT,â âÂÂAtonement, Day of,â âÂÂEncroachment,â âÂÂFirst fruits, OT,â âÂÂFirst-born,â âÂÂHeave offering,â âÂÂLeviticus,â âÂÂRepentance in the OT,â âÂÂSacrifices and Offerings, OT,â âÂÂSanctification,â and âÂÂWave offering.â In The InterpreterâÂÂs Dictionary of the Bible. Supp. vol., 78âÂÂ83, 264âÂÂ65, 336âÂÂ38, 391âÂÂ92, 541âÂÂ45, 736âÂÂ38, 763âÂÂ71, 782âÂÂ84, 944âÂÂ46. Nashville, Tenn: Abingdon, 1976. .
- âÂÂThe Temple Scroll.â Biblical Archaeologist. 41 (3) (Sep. 1978): 105âÂÂ120.
- âÂÂThe Case of the Suspected Adulteress, Numbers 5:11âÂÂ31: Redaction and Meaning.â In The Creation of Sacred Literature. Edited by Richard E. Friedman, 69âÂÂ75. Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1981. .
- âÂÂThe Levitic Town: An Exercise in Realistic Planning.â In Essays in Honour of Yigael Yadin. Edited by Géza Vermes and Jacob Neusner. Totowa, N.J.: Allanheld, Osmun and Co., 1983. .
- âÂÂMagic, Monotheism, and the Sin of Moses.â In The Quest for the Kingdom of God: Studies in Honor of George E. Mendenhall. Edited by H. B. Huffmon, F.A. Spina, A.R.W. Green, 251âÂÂ265. Winona Lake, Indiana: Eisenbrauns, 1983. .
- âÂÂOf Hems and Tassels: Rank, authority and holiness were expressed in antiquity by fringes on garments.â Biblical Archaeology Review. 9 (3) (May/June 1983).
- âÂÂChallenge to Sun-Worship Interpretation of Temple ScrollâÂÂs Gilded Staircase.â Biblical Archaeology Review. 11 (1) (Jan./Feb. 1985).
- âÂÂThe ChieftainâÂÂs Gifts: Numbers, Chapter 7,â Hebrew Annual Review. 9 (1985): 221âÂÂ225.
- âÂÂâÂÂYou Shall Not Boil a Kid in Its MotherâÂÂs MilkâÂÂ: An archaeological myth destroyed.â Bible Review. 1 (3) (Fall 1985): 48âÂÂ55.
- "Ethics and Ritual: The Foundations of the Biblical Dietary Laws." In Religion and Law: Biblical, Jewish, and Islamic Perspectives, 159âÂÂ91. Edited by E.B. Firmage. Winona Lake, Indiana: Eisenbrauns, 1989. .
- âÂÂSeeing the Ethical Within the Ritual: IsraelâÂÂs priests spoke in rituals, not in words. Their basic values are in the main ethical, and are ensconced in the rituals prescribed in the priestly texts of the Pentateuch.â Bible Review. 8 (4) (Aug. 1992).
- âÂÂFood and Faith: The Ethical Foundations of the Biblical Diet Laws: The Bible has worked out a system of restrictions whereby humans may satiate their lust for animal flesh and not be dehumanized. These laws teach reverence for life.â Bible Review. 8 (6) (Dec. 1992).
- âÂÂThe Priestly âÂÂPicture of Dorian GrayâÂÂ: Ancient Israel's priests would be aghast at the moral pollution of the earth: the brazen slaughter of thousands, millions dying of hunger, while the free world silently changes the channel.â Bible Review. 9 (2) (Apr. 1993).
- âÂÂSweet Land and Liberty: Whether real or utopian, the laws in Leviticus seem to be a more sensitive safeguard against pauperization than we, here and now, have devised.â Bible Review. 9 (4) (Aug. 1993).
- âÂÂDoes the Bible Prohibit Homosexuality? The biblical prohibition is addressed only to Israel. It is incorrect to apply it on a universal scale.â Bible Review. 9 (6) (Dec. 1993).
- âÂÂHow Not to Read the Bible: I am not for homosexuality, but I am for homosexuals. When the Bible is distorted to make God their enemy I must speak out to set the record straight.â Bible Review. 10 (2) (Apr. 1994).
- âÂÂAn Amputated Bible, Peradventure? The publishing house of Simon and Schuster has come up with a radical solution to the problem of âÂÂboringâ passages in the Bible: Eliminate them.â Bible Review. 10 (4) (Aug. 1994).
- âÂÂSex and Wisdom: What the Garden of Eden Story Is Saying: There is a plain, unambiguous meaning to the story: It is about sexual awareness and the creativity of which that is a part.â Bible Review. 10 (6) (Dec. 1994).
- âÂÂBible Versus Babel: Why did God tell Abraham to leave Mesopotamia, the most advanced civilization of its time, for the backwater region of Canaan?â Bible Review. 11 (2) (Apr. 1995).
- âÂÂThe Most Basic Law in the Bible: It is easy to âÂÂloveâ the war-ravaged Bosnians, the AIDS-stricken Zaireans or the bereaved of Oklahoma City. But what of the strangers in our midst, the vagrants on our sidewalks?â Bible Review. 11 (4) (Aug. 1994).
- âÂÂâÂÂThe Alien in Your MidstâÂÂ: Every nation has its ger: the permanent resident. The Torah commands us, first, not to oppress the ger, and then to befriend and love him.â Bible Review. 11 (6) (Dec. 1995).
- âÂÂLex Talionis and the Rabbis: The Talmud reflects an uneasy rabbinic conscience toward the ancient law of talion, âÂÂeye for eye, tooth for tooth.âÂÂâ Bible Review. 12 (2) (Apr. 1996).
- âÂÂA HusbandâÂÂs Pride, A MobâÂÂs Prejudice: The public ordeal undergone by a suspected adulteress in Numbers 5 was meant not to humiliate her but to protect her.â Bible Review. 12 (4) (Aug. 1996).
- âÂÂShifting Borders: The Whole Land of Israel.â Moment. (Aug. 1996): 52.
- âÂÂAlbert Schweitzer: Doctor, Musician, Theologian.â Bible Review. 12 (5) (Oct. 1996).
- âÂÂThe Water Libation in the Festival of Booths: Nonbiblical rites, though originating in popular worship and rooted in magical practice, were ultimately assimilated into IsraelâÂÂs official monotheism.â Bible Review. 12 (6) (Dec. 1996).
- âÂÂJubilee: A Rallying Cry for TodayâÂÂs Oppressed: The laws of the Jubilee year offer a blueprint for bridging the gap between the have and have-not nations.â Bible Review. 13 (2) (Apr. 1997).
- âÂÂThe Blood Taboo: Blood should not be ingested because it contains life. Whoever does so is guilty of murder.â Bible Review. 13 (4) (Aug. 1997).
- âÂÂThe Vow and the âÂÂPopular Religious Groupsâ of Ancient Israel: A Philological and Sociological Inquiry.â Journal of the American Oriental Society. 118 (4) (Oct. 1, 1998): 592.
- âÂÂThe Truth of Mosaic Origins.â In Mincha: Festgabe Fur Rolf Rendtorff Zum 75. Geburtstag. Edited by E. Blum. Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener Verlag, 2000.
References