Contents
ASanctification and Secularization
2The Paradox of Human Rights Discourse and the Jewish Legal Tradition
3Sovereign ImaginariesVisualizing the Sacred Foundation of Law’s Authority
4Dat: From Law to ReligionThe Transformation of a Formative Term in Modern Times
5Law As Religion, Religion As LawHalakhah from a Semiotic Point of View
6Canonicity As a Defining Feature of Legal and Religious DiscourseA Programmatic Essay
7Exceptional GraceReligion As the Sovereign Suspension of Law
8A Bad Man Theory of Religious Law (Numbers 15:30–31 and Its Afterlife)
11“Enjoin Them upon Your Children to Keep” (Deuteronomy 32:46)Law as Commandment and Legacy, or, Robert Cover Meets Midrash
12“Between Man and God” and “Between Man and His Fellow”Categories in Polemical Context
13Christian Feasts and Administration of Roman Justice in Late Antiquity
ELaw in Formation: Religious Perspectives
14Law as a Problematic Aspect of ReligionPaul’s Skepticism in a Broader Jewish Context
15When Law Meets TheologyLegality and Revelation in the Jewish, Islamic, and Zoroastrian Traditions in the Abbasid Period