Septuagint Sample Clauses

Septuagint. A brief note on terminology: in this study, the terms Septuagint and LXX refer broadly to the various early Greek translations of the Hebrew Bible.66 When noting variations 65 Joyce, Ezekiel, 53. 66 This fits with one of the major uses of the term highlighted (and used) by Karen H. Jobes and Moisés Silva, Invitation to the Septuagint, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2015), 14–15. The authors are careful to note: ‘Strictly speaking, there is really no such thing as the Septuagint’ (14). The need for a precise definition of terms, as well as the multiplicity of ways in which the term LXX was used by early Christian writers, was highlighted by Leonard Greenspoon (Leonard Greenspoon, ‘The Use and Reception of Ezekiel 36–37 in Early Judaism between Greek manuscripts, I will refer specifically to those manuscripts, but when all early Greek versions agree, the terms LXX or Septuagint will be used. Exploring the translation(s) of Ezekiel 36–37 in the Septuagint can give some clues as to how these texts were understood by some early Jewish groups and/or writers. Here, a methodological difficulty arises: can one simply compare a Greek version of Ezekiel 36–37 with the MT and assume that any changes which are not scribal errors reflect the theological emphases of the translator? Things are not so simple. On the one hand, differences between the MT and the Greek versions may be evidence of theological convictions by the translator(s). On the other hand, they could point to the use of a different Hebrew Vorlage than the MT. Put another way: a difference could either be an indicator of the reception of a text, or it could be evidence of a text-critical history. It is therefore important not to attribute too much to a difference between the LXX and the MT. Nonetheless, there are still good reasons for exploring the LXX of Ezekiel 36–37 as evidence of the chapters’ reception:
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