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Thomas Römer

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Thomas Römer
Born13 December 1955 Edit this on Wikidata
Mannheim Edit this on Wikidata
EducationDoctor of Theology Edit this on Wikidata
Alma mater
OccupationBiblical scholar, university teacher, editor, writer Edit this on Wikidata
Employer
Awards
Position heldadministrateur (Collège de France, 2019–) Edit this on Wikidata

Thomas Christian Römer (born 13 December 1955 in Mannheim) is a Swiss exegete, philologist and biblist, of German origin. After teaching at the University of Geneva, he became professor of the Old Testament at the University of Lausanne and, from 2007, held the chair "Biblical environments" at the Collège de France, of which he became administrator in 2019.

Biography

Life

Thomas Römer, born December 13, 1955[1] in Mannheim (Germany[2]) and raised in a practicing Protestant family, was very passionate about the Old Testament, intrigued in particular by its paradoxes. Without any particular vocation and like what was regularly practiced in Germany, he headed for theology. From 1982 to 1984, He was trainee minister of the Reformed Church of France in Nancy.[2][1]

Education

He studied theology and religious studies at the theological faculties of the University of Heidelberg and University of Tübingen from 1974 to 1980.[3][4] He studies biblical Hebrew, Ugaritic and other Semitic languages notably under the direction of Rolf Rendtorff, professor of Old Testament in Heidelberg, who encourages him to develop a thesis on the question of the Patriarchs in Deuteronomy and Deuteronomist story. From 1980 to 1982 Römer studied Religious Studies at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in Paris.[1] During his preparation in Paris, where he arrived in 1980, he attended the École Pratique des Hautes Etudes, the Catholic Institute of Paris and the Protestant Faculty of Theology in Paris - where his teacher was the exegete Françoise Florentin-Smyth - and obtained his doctorate in 1988.[2]

Doctoral thesis

This exhaustive thesis entitled Israels Väter is combining structuralist and historico-critical approaches, is part of the continuation of the work of John Van Seters. It postulates the controversial aim of the editors of Deuteronomy against certain Judean circles and that the Pentateuch is the result of an attempt to unify between two factions internal to post-Babylonian exile, split between the exiles returning from Babylon and the Jews who remained in the country and whose visions are expressed respectively through the tradition of the Patriarchs and that of the Exodus. This thesis innovates in particular by suggesting that the fathers mentioned in Deuteronomy are those of the Exodus and not the patriarchs, that the Deuteronomist editor considers that the only and true Israel is in the Golah, that is to say the exiles Babylonians, and that the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob did not appear in Deuteronomy until the final writing of the Pentateuch.

Academic work

University of Geneva

From 1984 to 1989, Römer was a research assistant of Albert de Pury in the Old Testament at the Faculty of Theology of the University of Geneva, and lecturer of Biblical Hebrew and Ugaritic.[2] At the invitation of Albert de Pury, met in Paris, Thomas Römer joined the University of Geneva where he became senior lecturer at the Faculty of Theology from 1989 to 1991, before he became assistant professor teaching biblical philology and biblical exegesis from 1991 until 1993.[2]

University of Lausanne

Since 1993, he was professor of biblical Hebrew at the faculty of theology and science of religions in the University of Lausanne,[5][3] as well as at the Institut romand des sciences bibliques (IRSB) 12 which was attached to him.[6] In 2003, he was contacted by French authorities, when Jacques Chirac tried to clarify George W. Bush's allusions to the biblical prophecies on "Gog and Magog" a few weeks before the invasion of Iraq, to which he gave a biblical note on this apocalyptic prophecy.[7]

Collège de France

In 2007, at the invitation of the assyriologist Jean-Marie Durand, Thomas Römer was appointed professor at the Collège de France where he held the chair "Milieux Bibliques": it was the first time that the term "Bible" appeared in a title of a research program of the College de France.[8][9]

Since 2013, he has directed the UMR 7192 "Near East-Caucasus: languages, archeology, cultures". Became vice-president of the assembly of professors of the College de France in 2015, he was elected the following year a foreign associate of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, in the chair of the medievalist Peter Lewis.

His work has contributed to deeply renewing the understanding of the formation and dating of the Pentateuch as well as of the constitution of Jewish traditions on Abraham and Moses in particular. Thus, his work The So-Called Deuteronomistic History, published in English in 2005 and translated into several languages, marks a milestone in the history of Deuteronomist research. In January 2019, he made the cover of the popular science journal for the general public Sciences et Avenir for his philological and archaeological work on the Ark of the Covenant and his participation in excavations at the archaeological site of Kiriath Yearim (near Abu Gosh in Israel).

From 2015 to 2019, Römer was Vice-President of the Assembly of Professors of the Collège de France.[10] On 1 September 2019 he was appointed administrator of the Collège de France,[11] succeeding Alain Prochiantz.[12] Of German and Swiss nationality, he became the first foreigner to head the Collège de France.[1]

Historical-critical approach

Thomas Römer adopts an academic approach which combines historical criticism, literary and philological analysis of Old Testament texts,[10] sometimes supported by archeology, seeking to detect the social, political or cultural circumstances which are the framework of the religious thought they generate, regardless of impact or contemporary theological readings. He notes that the writing of biblical texts constitutes a form of synthesis between identity conceptions and quite different theological conceptions and believes that this approach, which sometimes clashes with traditional representations, can serve both atheists and believers in their reflections on current issues.

Editorial work

The Society of Biblical Literature Press, Ancient Israel and Its Literature (AIL) editorial board is led by series editor Thomas C. Römer.[13]

Honors

  • Prize for the history of religions of the Foundation "Les amis de Pierre-Antoine Bernheim" (2014) for the book L'Invention de Dieu
  • Doctor honoris causa of the Tel Aviv University (2015)[14] of which he has been Sackler Scholar since 2012
  • Leenaards Foundation Cultural Prize (2015)

Publications

Bibliography (1984-2016): IRSB Publications.

  • Römer, Thomas (1990). Israels Väter: Untersuchungen zur Väterthematik im Deuteronomium und in der deuteronomistischen Tradition. Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis (in German). Vol. 99. Freiburg, Schweiz: Universitätsverlag; Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. ISBN 9783727806735. OCLC 22099772.
  • Thomas Römer et Jean-Daniel Macchi, Guide de la Bible hébraïque: La critique textuelle dans la Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia (BHS), Genève, Labor et Fides, 1994
  • Thomas Römer, Dieu obscur: Le sexe, la cruauté et la violence dans l’Ancien Testament, Genève, Labor et Fides, coll. « Essais Bibliques » (no 27), 1998 (1re éd. 1996)
  • Thomas Römer, Le peuple élu et les autres: L’Ancien Testament entre exclusion et ouverture, Poliez-le-Grand, Éditions du Moulin, 1997
  • Thomas Römer, Les chemins de la sagesse: Proverbes, Job, Qohéleth, Poliez-le-Grand, Éditions du Moulin, 1999
  • Thomas Römer, Moïse « lui que Yahvé a connu face à face », Paris, Gallimard, coll. « Découvertes Gallimard / Religions » (no 424), 2002
  • Thomas Römer, Jérémie: Du prophète au livre, Poliez-le-Grand, Éditions du Moulin, 2003
  • Thomas Römer et Loyse Bonjour, L'homosexualité dans le Proche-Orient ancien et la Bible, Genève, Labor et Fides, coll. « Essais bibliques » (no 37), 2005
  • Römer, Thomas (2006). The So-Called Deuteronomistic History. London, Continuum International Publishing Group; New York: T & T Clark. ISBN 9780567040220. OCLC 62089069.
  • Thomas Römer (trans. F. Smyth), La première histoire d'Israël: L'École deutéronomiste à l'œuvre, Genève, Labor et Fides, coll. « Le Monde de la Bible » (no 56), 2007
  • Thomas Römer, Psaumes interdits, Aubonne, Éditions du Moulin, 2007
  • Römer, Thomas (2009). Les Cornes de Moïse: Faire entrer la Bible dans l'histoire. Leçons inaugurales du Collège de France. Vol. 206. Paris: Collège de France, Fayard. ISBN 9782821814660. OCLC 949650209.
  • Thomas Römer, Jean-Marie Durand et Jean-Pierre Mahé, La faute et sa punition dans les sociétés orientales, Leuven, Peeters, 2013
  • Römer, Thomas; Davies, Philip R. (2013). Writing the Bible: Scribes, Scribalism and Script. Bible world (London, England). Durham, Acumen Publishing. ISBN 9781844657315. OCLC 827261812.
  • Thomas Römer, L’Invention de Dieu, Paris, Seuil, coll. « Les Livres du nouveau monde », 2014
  • Thomas Römer, La Bible, quelles histoires!: Les dernières découvertes, les dernières hypothèses, Genève, Labor et Fides, 2014 (ISBN 978-2-8309-1541-9)
  • Thomas Römer, Moïse en version originale: Enquête sur le récit de la sortie d’Égypte, Bayard/Labor et Fides, 2015 (ISBN 978-2-8309-1584-6)
  • Thomas Römer et Léonie Bischoff, Naissance de la Bible: comment elle a été écrite, Bruxelles, Le Lombard, coll. « La Petite Bédéthèque des savoirs » (no 23), 2018 (ISBN 978-2-8036-7101-4)
  • Thomas Römer et Israël Finkelstein, Aux origines de la Torah: Nouvelles rencontres, nouvelles perspectives, Bayard, 2019 (ISBN 978-2227494701)

References

Bibliography