God’s Judgment of the Nations
b. Avodah Zarah 2a–3b
220–600
R. Ḥanina bar Papa, and some say R. Simlai, expounded:
In the world to come, the Holy One, blessed be He, will bring a Torah scroll and set it in his lap, and say, “Let everyone who occupied himself with this come and take his reward.” Straightaway the nations of the world assemble and come in confusion, as it says: All…
This passage in the Babylonian Talmud illustrates the dialectical tension between universalist and particularist impulses. The core narrative relates God’s final judgment against the nations and the elevation of Israel. It is interrupted by anonymous editorial glosses that question the justice and mercy of the proceedings. The result is a dialogical text in which the main themes of the underlying eschatological drama are contested or subverted.
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