Commentary: On Jeremiah

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Fragment of damaged parchment with ornate gold designs and depictions, including a candelabrum and other ritual objects, geometric and floral patterns, and architectural features.
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Here, Judah Ibn Bal‘am, writing in Judeo-Arabic, first considers two issues of importance to medieval Jewish theology and law: the validity of the oral tradition and divine omnipotence. In the last passage, he invokes the Qur’ān to help him elucidate the text. Like many of his Andalusi compatriots, Ibn Bal‘am was comfortable drawing linguistic and other inferences from classical Islamic texts.

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