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American biblical scholar From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mark Stratton John Matthew Smith (born December 6, 1956) is an American Old Testament scholar and professor.
Mark S. Smith | |
---|---|
Born | Paris, France | December 6, 1955
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | biblical scholar, professor |
Board member of | Chairperson, Catholic Biblical Quarterly Monograph Series |
Spouse | Elizabeth M. Bloch-Smith |
Children | 3 |
Academic background | |
Education | Johns Hopkins University, Catholic University of America, Harvard Divinity School |
Alma mater | Yale University (Ph.D.) |
Thesis | Kothar wa-Hasis, the Ugaritic Craftsman God (1985) |
Doctoral advisor | Marvin H. Pope |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Ancient Near Eastern languages, Religions of the Ancient Near East, Old Testament Literature |
Institutions | New York University, Princeton Theological Seminary |
Born in Paris to Donald Eugene Smith and Mary Elizabeth (Betty) Reichert, Smith grew up in Washington, D.C., with his six sisters and two brothers. For elementary school, he attended Blessed Sacrament School. For grades 7–12, he went to St. Anselm's Abbey School.[citation needed]
Smith began his university studies at Johns Hopkins University receiving his B.A. in English in 1976.[citation needed] He received his Masters in theology at Catholic University of America in 1978.[citation needed] He received a Masters of Theological Studies, concentrating in biblical studies, at Harvard Divinity School, in 1981.[citation needed]
At Harvard, Smith studied with Frank Moore Cross, Thomas Lambdin, William Moran, and Michael D. Coogan. Primarily studying West Semitic languages and literatures, including the Hebrew Bible, Smith took an M.A. (1982), M.Phil. (1983), and Ph.D. (1985) in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Literatures at Yale University.[citation needed] His advisor and director of his dissertation on Kothar-wa-Khasis, the Ugaritic craftsman god, was Marvin H. Pope, author of works on Ugaritic and biblical religion, including two commentaries in the Anchor Bible series on the Song of Songs and Job.[citation needed] At Yale, Smith also studied with Franz Rosenthal, Brevard Childs, Robert R. Wilson, and W. W. Hallo.[citation needed] While writing his dissertation, he studied at the Hebrew University for a year (1984–1985) under Jonas C. Greenfield.[citation needed]
After graduate school, Smith focused on the history of Israelite and ancient Near Eastern religion. He also began to explore the representation of deities and divinity in the Hebrew Bible and the ancient Near East from the Bronze Age to the Greco-Roman period. For several summers in the late 1980s and early 1990s, he also studied Dead Sea Scrolls with John Strugnell at the Ecole Biblique. This work issued in the publications of four manuscripts of the Dead Sea Scrolls.[citation needed]
Smith was the chair of Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Studies in the Department of Hebrew and Judaic Studies at New York University, and then came to be professor of Old Testament Literature and Exegesis at Princeton Theological Seminary.[1]
Smith made many contributions to the study of the Hebrew Bible and Northwest Semitic texts as well as Ugaritic literature and religion.[2][3] Among his most notable publications are The Early History of God, The Origins of Biblical Monotheism, and his translation of the Baal Cycle (The Ugaritic Baal Cycle, Vols. 1–2).
Smith has been married since 1983 to the archaeologist Elizabeth M. Bloch-Smith, author of Judahite Burials and Beliefs about the Dead. They have three children named Benjamin, Rachel, and Shulamit.[citation needed] Smith is a Roman Catholic.[1]
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