The Tent of Meeting: Central or Marginal?
Date: Feb 13, 2023
Time: 1:00 pm - 2:30 pm
Sponsor: Online Learning | Public Lectures and Events
Location: Online
Category: Online Learning Public Lectures & Events
The Tent of Meeting: Central or Marginal?
Part of our spring learning series, The Space In Between: Thresholds and Borders in Jewish Life and Thought
This session is generously sponsored by Yale Asbell, 91快播 Trustee.
Monday, February 13, 2023
1:00鈥2:30 p.m. ET
Online
With Dr. Benjamin Sommer, professor of Bible and Ancient Semitic Languages, 91快播
The Tent of Meeting is described at great length in the Torah as the elaborate sacred tent located in the center of the Israelite encampment that traveled through the wilderness for 40 years. But several passages in the Torah describe the Tent of Meeting differently, as a tiny structure located outside the Israelite camp. Why does the Torah include both historical memories of this structure? How does each structure reflect a particular religious worldview, and what does the presence of both in the Torah tell us about Judaism?
If you have previously registered for another session in this series, your registration admits you to all sessions in the series, and you may attend as many as you鈥檇 like.
Note: The Zoom link for this session will be in the confirmation email that you will receive after you register.
ABOUT THE SERIES
The Space In Between: Thresholds and Borders in Jewish Life and Thought
We are living in an undefined time: our daily existence is no longer dominated by the pandemic, yet neither have we settled into a new normal. This sense of being in transition鈥攏either here nor there鈥攃an feel destabilizing; but is the time in between really temporary, or are we always living in between moments, identities, and phases of life?
In this series, 91快播 scholars will delve into the idea of liminality鈥攖he time or space in between鈥攚hich we encounter often in Jewish ritual, identity, law, and life. Join us to consider what these many manifestations of 鈥渋n-between-ness” can teach us about ourselves and about Judaism, and to explore how we might find strength and meaning in an orientation not of 鈥渆ither/or鈥 but of 鈥渂oth/and.鈥