Bible as Theater

Shimon Levy reads biblical narratives as staged drama; PaRDeS enriches this lens.

Shimon Levy’s Bible as Theatre treats Tanakh stories as theatrical texts—scenes, stage directions, character arcs, and embodied performance—rather than only as literature or theology. The approach surfaces how dialogue, timing, and spatial cues create meaning, letting readers “direct” episodes like Samuel’s callingJonah’s questEzekiel’s sign-acts, and David and Bathsheba as living theatre. ​⁠https://www.amazon.com/Bible-as-Theatre-Shimon-Levy/dp/1898723516

PaRDeS—peshat, remez, derash, sod—can deepen this method:

Practically, a PaRDeS-informed rehearsal might map textual beats to stage beats, assign midrashic subtext to actors’ objectives, and design sound/light as “remez” layers, reserving moments of negative space for “sod.” JSTOR’s table of contents outlines many candidate scenes for such treatment, including studies of DeborahTamarRuth, and Jehu’s spectacle​⁠https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv3029s7v

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