Dear Librarians, 

Please be informed of the new title published by Bar-Ilan University Press 
:








The Bible in Rabbinic Interpretation 
Rabbinic Derashot on Prophets and Writings in Talmudic and Midrashic 
Literature, Volume Two: Joel and Amos
In the Series: The Institute for Jewish Bible Interpretation – Sources and 
Studies 
By Jordan S. Penkower, Menachem Ben-Yashar 


ISBN: 978-965-226-446-6



928 pgs. Hebrew. Hardcover. 2014



I am pleased to inform you that Bar-Ilan Umiversity Press has just 
published: The Bible in Rabbinic Interpretation: Joel and Amos (Hebrew) by 
Professor Jordan S. Penkower and Menahem Ben-Yashar, of Bar-Ilan 
University, Department of Bible. This is the second volume in this series; 
the previous volume focused on Hosea.
This book gathers all the derashot on the books of Joel and Amos from the 
entire corpus of rabbinic literature: the Talmud and the Midrashim (about 
650 derashot). The derashot are arranged according to the biblical 
sequence of chapters and verses. Each chapter of Joel and Amos corresponds 
to a chapter in the book.
Every derasha is explained both with respect to itself and with respect to 
the biblical text, in order to clarify which difficulties the darshan 
found in the verse, and what were the solutions that he offered in the 
derasha. The difficulties and the solutions were arranged into separate 
categories, and each derasha is described with respect to the difficulty 
and solution with which it deals. At the end of each chapter a short 
summary according to the plain sense of the biblical text is given, and in 
juxtaposition, the derashot of that chapter, as well as their main 
tendencies, are summarized, in order to show the difference between the 
plain and the midrashic sense of the verses.

Utilizing the large amount of material gathered in the book, one can also 
deal with the fundamental issue: in what measure are the derashot of our 
Sages biblical exegesis, a response to the difficulties in the verses, and 
in what measure are the derashot a literary means to present the Sages’ 
point of view.

The book closes with several indices: biblical verses in the derashot, 
biblical verses in the notes, rabbinical sources, the exegetical 
difficulties and solutions divided into categories – and the assigning of 
each derasha (by its number in the book) to these categories of 
difficulties and solutions.

I close with a link to the book on the Bar-Ilan University website:
http://www.biupress.co.il/website/index.asp?category=18&id=926


Happy to be of Service, 

Dina Kupperberg
Distribution Dept.
=====================
Bar-Ilan University Press 


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