Ritual and Rhetoric in Leviticus: From Sacrifice to Scripture

James Washington Watts
Cambridge University Press, 2007-07-02 - Religion - 257 pages
Ritual
and Rhetoric in Leviticus uses rhetorical analysis to expose the
motives behind the writing of the central book of the Torah/Pentateuch
and its persuasive function in ancient Judaism. The answer to the
question, 'who was trying to persuade whom of what by writing these
texts?' proves to be quite consistent throughout Leviticus 1-16:
Aaronide high priests and their supporters used this book to legitimize
their monopoly over the ritual offerings of Jews and Samaritans. With
this priestly rhetoric at its center, the Torah supported the rise to
power of two priestly dynasties in Second Temple Judaism. Their
ascendancy in turn elevated the prestige and rhetorical power to the
book, making it the first real scripture in Near Eastern and Western
religious traditions. Rhetorical analysis of Leviticus therefore has
implications not only for the form and contents of that book, but also
for understanding the later history of the rhetoric of priesthood, of
sacrifice, and especially of scripture
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