Harmonize refers to an interpretive practice in which differences between texts are explained or reshaped so the texts can be read as agreeing. This is done after the differences are noticed, by supplying missing details, narrowing meanings, or treating one passage as correcting or clarifying another. Harmonization does not remove the original tension between texts, since the differences remain present in the wording itself. Instead, it offers a later interpretive solution that overlays coherence onto material that was not originally uniform.
Intertexts
References
- Klein, Ralph W., 2 Chronicles: A Commentary
- Zipor, Moshe A., "The Nature of the Septuagint Version of the Book of Leviticus" in Himbaza, Innocent (ed.) The Text of Leviticus: Proceedings of the Third International Colloquium of the Dominique Barthélemy Institute
- Krisel, William, Judges 19-21 and the “Othering” of Benjamin: A Golah Polemic against the Autochthonous Inhabitants of the Land?
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