1 texts
Rosh Hashanah in Jewish mythology is documented here through 1 source passages from 1 distinct source names represented in this theme. The strongest clusters come from Rabbinic Midrash (1), with frequent witnesses in Midrash Aggadah (1). These texts preserve how Jewish writers, sages, and mystics described rosh hashanah across biblical interpretation, rabbinic storytelling, medieval compilation, and kabbalistic teaching.
This page is a topic hub, not a single article. Use it to compare how different Jewish sources treat rosh hashanah: where the theme appears in narrative, how it changes across source families, which figures or symbols recur, and which passages are most useful for citation. Representative entries include The Ashes of Isaac and the Naming of Adonai-Yireh at the Binding. For synthesized anthology narratives, start with God Made Adam with Justice and Holiness in Midrash, The Shofar Is Sounded Because Isaac Was There First, and Why Job's Trials Began on Rosh Hashanah and the Double-Head Stumped.
Akedah (1), Divine Mercy (1), Intercession (1), and Merit of the Fathers (1)