Was Jesus a Gemini?
There was an interesting article in the Telegraph earlier this week: ‘Jesus was born in June’, astronomers claim.
Astronomers have calculated that Christmas should be in June, by charting the appearance of the ‘Christmas star’ which the Bible says led the three Wise Men to Jesus.
They found that a bright star which appeared over Bethlehem 2,000 years ago pinpointed the date of Christ’s birth as June 17 rather than December 25. Read more…
An SOS from the Penn Museum
Things are bad financially when the Penn Museum is eliminating research positions. The following is a plea for help from Irene Winter:
All ‘soft-money’ research positions are easy targets in times of financial difficulty, as they are not protected by academic tenure. In an announcement made by Richard Hodges, Director of the University Museum of the University of Pennsylvania on the eve of the Thanksgiving holiday, research positions in the University Museum have been summarily eliminated, including all of MASCA, the Museum’s Applied Science Center for Archaeology.
Letters from colleagues in the archaeological community to the current Director of the Museum and to the President of Penn [addresses provided below] could be very helpful in getting this decision reversed.
The larger issue: the mission of the UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA and THE UNIVERSITY MUSEUM — indeed all academic institutions — MUST be to contribute to the accumulation and preservation of knowledge, ESPECIALLY in hard times.
History: The role of MASCA over the years in contributing to archaeological knowledge can be stressed in different ways: the importance of the work of its research scientists to the scholarly community [e.g., Patrick McGovern on ceramics & issues Mediterranean; Naomi Miller on archaeo-botany and the interpretation of archaeological materials in the ANE; Kathleen Ryan on the treatment of animal skins and the making of parchment, cited by all Medievalists working on mss. and codicology; and many more], as well as the importance of the MASCA Newsletter, to the broader scientific community at large. The importance of the CONTINUATION of that work and of the Newsletter as a vehicle for the dissemination of the results of scientific analysis in archaeology can then be underscored as crucial to the field.
The very future of scientific study in archaeology is on the line, and colleagues’ voices are needed to support its importance. It should be noted that such programs can be sustained at relatively little cost, at the same time as other Museum programs and outreach are sustained, developed, and subject to cost-effective constraints, without wiping out a whole domain of scholarly endeavour in which the University Museum has played a pioneering role.
**Colleagues are also asked to pass this issue/message on to the various lists to which you subscribe. In the past, a number of threatened programs and positions have been flagged — for example, in France and in Germany — and in some cases at least, outcry from the scholarly community has proven effective in securing targeted programs/positions.**
Many thanks to all of you who help with this urgent matter.
Irene Winter
Harvard UniversityRelevant addresses:
Dr. Richard Hodges, Director
The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
3260 South Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104Dr. Amy Guttman, President
The University of Pennsylvania
100 College Hall
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6380
[president@pobox.upenn.edu]
(HT and hyperlinks: Ancient World Blogger Group)
A Kindler, Gentler Herod the Great
The December issue of National Geographic has as its cover article King Herod Revealed: The Holy Land’s Visionary Builder. While it has some nice pictures and some good information, I found the whole thing a bit misleading.
Now, I know, thems are fightin’ words. But, I encourage all of you who haven’t to read the article. While there are several issues in the article, the main problem for me was how the author Tom Mueller dealt with his sources. Read more…
Questioning Esther 4:14
Esther 4:14 is a bit of a troublesome verse. Mordecai appears to threaten and then affirm Esther in the short space of one verse – making him play good cop and bad cop in rapid succession. However, an article by John Wiebe posits that there’s an unmarked question lurking in the text. Read more…
Biblical Studies Carnival XXXVI is up
Jim West has posted Biblical Studies Carnival XXXVI. Apparently Jim’s lawyer required him to place a snarkiness disclaimer before the business of the day, but it’s obvious that the disclaimer is made in bad faith [smirk].
Additionally, NT Wrong has posted November’s Top 50 Bibloblogs. I now register number 40 on said list, a place I owe largely to my posting of Pardee’s transcription of the Kuttamuwa Inscription. I will display the acompanying cheesy graphic with pride until I drop off the list and back to the relative obscurity befitting a specialist in Ugaritic and ritual studies.
Mid Atlantic Regional SBL Deadline Extention
For those in the Mid Atlantic region of the Society of Biblical Literature, you might be interested in this update from Jeremy Schipper:
Dear Colleagues,
We are extending the call for papers deadline for the Mid Atlantic Regional SBL meeting for an extra week. If you have not done so already, please email me your submissions by FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12 (rather than this coming Friday) at schipper@temple.edu. We will be meeting on March 26-27, 2009 in Baltimore.
For further information regarding submission guidelines, awards, locations, and hotel reservations, please see my previous post.
And remeber, those more inclined towards the ancient Near East are encouraged to submit papers as well.
A Bit of English Irony
Better Bible Blogs posted Mark Strauss’ Evangelical Theological Society paper entitled “Why the English Standard Version (ESV) Should not become the Standard English Translation.” I found this statement in his conclusion rather ironic:
I would recommend that the ESV committee enlist competent English stylists to carefully review the entire text with an eye toward standard English idiom.
I know I’m being pedantic, but it’s humorous to see someone criticizing a translation’s English style while splitting an infinitive.
For the record I’m not a big fan of the ESV either. I can’t really use an androcentric translation in my line of work.
SBL 2008 Day 4
The last morning (Tuesday) involved a lot of running around for me. There were interesting papers in Pentateuch and Assyria and the Bible. Luckily, both were on the same floor, and my lovely wife could watch my laptop in the Pentateuch room while I went to hear about Gilgamesh. Read more…
SBL 2008 Day 3
My entire itinerary for Monday was thrown off by a variety of factors. As such, I didn’t attend any of the sessions that I had previously planned; but the papers I did attend were pretty good. Read more…
Kuttamuwa Inscription Update: Pardee’s transcription
Yesterday I attended Dennis Pardee and David Schloen’s paper “A New Alphabetic Inscription from Zincirli.” Here’s a rough cut of Pardee’s transcription of the Kuttamuwa Inscription. I need to stress, this is Pardee’s work not my own. Read more…


