Digital Abrahamic Research Library
Comparative study of semantic instability, manuscript traditions, theological tensions, translation history, and interpretive development across scripture.
This section investigates Hebrew roots, lexical instability, semantic development, prophetic terminology, and comparative linguistic structures.
Special attention is given to unstable terminology, layered meanings, contextual shifts, and interpretive transformations across traditions.
Analysis of human-like divine descriptions, embodiment language, sacred encounters, and symbolic representation.
Studying narratives involving divine appearance, prophetic encounter, visibility traditions, and mediated presence.
Distinguishing between divine speech, angelic mediation, prophetic reception, and human interpretation.
Examining theological reinterpretation, textual layering, and evolving scriptural understanding.
The project studies manuscript preservation, scribal traditions, translation history, textual variants, and historical transmission across sacred texts.
Research includes the Masoretic Text, Dead Sea Scrolls, Septuagint traditions, Codex Sinaiticus, Codex Vaticanus, and early Qur’anic manuscripts.
Semantic instability, prophetic expectation, and translation variation in Haggai traditions.
Interpretive history, theological transformation, and continuity debates within Gospel traditions.
Divine plurality language, theological representation, and contextual interpretation.
Revelation language, divine communication, and conceptual development across traditions.
This project investigates how later scriptural traditions reinterpret earlier revelation, preserve continuity, and restructure theological meaning through language and narrative.
The study explores continuity between the Torah, Gospel, and Qur’an through comparative textual analysis, theological structures, and prophetic development.
The project approaches scripture through linguistic analysis, manuscript comparison, semantic investigation, and theological interpretation.
The objective is not polemical criticism, but understanding how sacred texts develop, preserve continuity, and communicate divine revelation across history.