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Midrash
[Heb.,=to examine, to investigate], verse by verse interpretation of Hebrew
Scriptures, consisting of homily and exegesis, by Jewish teachers since about
400 B.C. Distinction is made between Midrash halakah,
dealing with the legal portions of Scripture, and Midrash haggada, dealing
with biblical lore. Midrashic exposition of both kinds appears throughout
the Talmud. Individual midrashic commentaries were composed by rabbis after the 2d cent. A.D.
up to the Middle Ages, and they were mostly of an aggadic nature, following
the order of the scriptural text. Important among them are the Midrash Rabbah,
a collection of commentaries on the Torah and the Five Scrolls (the Song
of Songs, Esther, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes), and the Pesikta Midrashim, concerning the festivals. This body of rabbinic literature contains the earliest speculative thought in the Jewish tradition.
See H. L. Strack, Introduction to the Talmud and Midrash (1931, repr. 1969); L. Ginzberg, Legends of the Bible (1956); N. N. Glatzer, Hammer on the Rock (1962).