Robert Phenix investigates the collection of twelve Syriac poetic sermons recounting the story of Joseph in Genesis 37 and 39-50. The authorship of these poems has been disputed, but this is the first study to attempt to argue from all aspects of the evidence that Balai of Qenneshrin is the author. The study then examines all of the data that can be associated with Balai: the religious environment of Qenneshrin and nearby Aleppo, Balai's connections with the monk-bishops of central Syria in the late fourth and early fifth centuries, particularly Acacius of Beroea/Aleppo and Rabbula of Edessa, the status of chorbishops, and the presence of Syriac speakers. Since it is argued in this study that Balai's source for the Sermons on Joseph was a Jewish text, this section also carefully examines the evidence for the Jewish community in Qenneshrin. As part of the background of the author, links between characters and the physical setting of the Sermons on Joseph and Qenneshrin are investigated. The relationship of the Sermons on Joseph to other Syriac Joseph sources and Joseph material in the Pseudepigrapha and at Qumran is discussed, followed by the question of the origin of the story, which is located in a lost Greek Jewish composition. The last section of the work examines the author's use of Hellenistic rhetoric and literary themes. The many speeches in the Sermons on Joseph reveal rhetorical arrangements that are strikingly close to the models of arrangement found in Late Antique handbooks, such as the Hermogenic Corpus . Several of these arguments are examined, as are the elaborate prefaces that introduce some of the individual Sermons on Joseph . The literary themes and motifs of the Sermons on Joseph are explored. It can be shown that some motifs known only in Syriac religious literature are employed in the Sermons on Joseph in non-religious literary contexts.
Série archéologique 9; Lyon: Maison de l'Orient; Paris: DiVusion de Boccard, 1982), 287–98. ... American Archaeological Expedition to Syria in 1899–1900, Part 4; New York: Century, 1904), 47–54, and Talbert, Barrington Atlas, 68 E2 (ed.
Balai of Qenneshrin, who may have been chor- bishop in Qenneshrin and in nearby villages, was active in the late-fourth and early-fifth centuries and wrote, among other things, a work entitled Sermons on Joseph. robert Phenix has ...
version, which proved influential upon later homilists.28 Those syriac homilists, who treat specifically of Joseph and also mention the ring in this regard, include Balai of Qenneshrin (in the early fifth century) and Ps.-narsai,29 ...
Philo speaks specifically of the logeum as “an emblem of that reason which holds together and regulates the universe” (On the Life of Moses II, ), a clear reference to the Logos (Wolfson, Philo, I, ).
We have cases in which a prose homily on a given theme is found alongside closely related verse homilies on the same theme.58 The Syriac History can usefully be read ... Phenix, Robert R. The Sermons on Joseph of Balai of Qenneshrin.
The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity is the first comprehensive reference book covering every aspect of history, culture, religion, and life in Europe, the Mediterranean, and the Near East (including the Persian Empire and Central Asia) ...
Another approach to the multiple children of Adam and Eve is in the context of the events of Adam's first day in Paradise. GenR 22:2 describes three wonders on the first day—the creation of Adam and Eve, their cohabitation and ...
There he describes Solomon's Jerusalem and, to flatter Lorenzo de' Medici, compares the biblical city famous for its wealth to Laurentian Florence.76 No member of Ghiberti's circle, however, and probably nobody in Florence in the period ...
This volume surveys the 'Syriac world', the culture that grew up among the Syriac-speaking communities from the second century CE and which continues to exist and flourish today, both in its original homeland of Syria and Mesopotamia, and ...
Phenix, R.R. The Sermons on Joseph of Balai of Qenneshrin: Rhetoric and Interpretation in Fifth-Century Syriac Literature. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2008. Piamenta, M. Dictionary of Post-Classical Yemeni Arabic. Leiden: Brill, 1990–91.