Too often, a former Hebrew student is a lapsed Hebrew student. The paradigms, the syntactical forms, and even the alphabet can be hard to recall. The way to make Hebrew stick, like any language, is to continue to put it to use.
In Ruth: A Guide to Reading Biblical Hebrew, Adam J. Howell helps intermediate readers of Hebrew work through the text of Ruth with exegetical and syntactical aids. With Howell as a guide, students will be able to mine the riches of the Hebrew text to appreciate the literary and theological significance of the book of Ruth.
Adam Howell has produced an informative, highly useful, and visually attractive guide to the Hebrew text of Ruth. The book of Ruth is a great choice for students looking to improve their Hebrew reading skills after they have finished their first year of the language, and this text will be an invaluable resource. It will remind them of what they already learned, give them new insights into the language, and encourage them to persevere.
–Duane A. Garrett, professor of Old Testament, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
Adam Howell has produced an excellent resource for students of biblical Hebrew. Through a clause-by-clause analysis of the Hebrew text of Ruth, Howell reinforces the fundamentals while guiding readers beyond the basics; all of this with a goal of hearing the voice of God in the text of Scripture. This book will be a help to many!
–Andrew M. King, assistant professor of biblical studies, Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary & Spurgeon College
Howell’s Ruth: A Guide to Reading Biblical Hebrew is a helpful companion volume for those studying the Hebrew text of Ruth. Rather than focusing on linguistics or complex syntax (though he neglects neither), Howell most frequently addresses morphology and Masoretic accentuation—the very aspects of text work with which students most struggle as they transition from grammar to biblical analysis. Howell’s pedagogical instincts shine through in his down-to-earth explanations and playful descriptions of complicated structures. Students will find the book informative, approachable, and—dare I say—fun.
–Michelle Knight, assistant professor of Old Testament and Semitic Languages, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
In this “phrase-by-phrase, clause-by-clause discussion of Hebrew syntax,” which also gives the Masoretic accent system it’s due, Howell gives students a delightful guide to reading the Hebrew text of the delightful book of Ruth. Howell provides good grist for the mill for intermediate analysis and classroom discussion.
–Mark Futato, Robert L. Maclellan Professor of Old Testament, Reformed Theological Seminary
2 ratings
Stephanus Karnadhi
6/26/2023
Jamin Kwanusu
6/18/2023