"The Place is Too Small for Us": The Israelite Prophets in Recent ScholarshipR. P. Gordon Eisenbrauns, 1995 - 638 sider "The title of this volume is, of course, taken from 2 Kgs 6:1, where the prophetic group about Elisha point out that their accomodation is too cramped. It seemed an apt comment on the capacity of any proposed volume to house and adequate representation of the work that has recently been done on Israelite prophecy. To this I now have to add the all-too-ironic confession that the so-called pre-classical prophets (including Elisha and his colleagues) could not be accomodated in the present volume. Let no one complain about being misled by the subtitle when the title is so honest ... there are thirty-six items of varying legnth, and they divide almost equally between journal articles and excerpts from volumes (some of thes of composite authorship). Naturally, they represent one individual's selection from within his personal reading, and this itself accounts for only a fraction of the vast scholarly output on the prophets, whether since 1875 or since 1975 ... It will be apparent at several places in the volume that I take with great seriousness the study of Near Eastern (non-Israelite) prophecy as background to the Israelite phenomenon, so that the first short section (The Near Eastern Background") was unavoidable."--Editor's preface. |
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Resultater 1-5 af 91
Side 23
... seems more likely for some of the more extended examples of this biblical phenomenon.92 There is also an increased awareness in recent prophets study of the way in which the dialogue between a prophet and his audience may be reflected ...
... seems more likely for some of the more extended examples of this biblical phenomenon.92 There is also an increased awareness in recent prophets study of the way in which the dialogue between a prophet and his audience may be reflected ...
Side 24
... seems to be implied in McKane's concept of a " rolling corpus " in Jeremiah , according to which texts generate other texts phraseologically or ideologically similar , though McKane does not see the process in Jeremiah as particularly ...
... seems to be implied in McKane's concept of a " rolling corpus " in Jeremiah , according to which texts generate other texts phraseologically or ideologically similar , though McKane does not see the process in Jeremiah as particularly ...
Side 35
... seems that when the muhhu appears in the text , the act of going into trance ( namhu ) is self - understood and only itbe is mentioned . On the other hand , imahhi refers to the whole process and therefore when it occurs no itbe needs ...
... seems that when the muhhu appears in the text , the act of going into trance ( namhu ) is self - understood and only itbe is mentioned . On the other hand , imahhi refers to the whole process and therefore when it occurs no itbe needs ...
Side 36
... seems to be as- sociated with dirt and self - inflicted wounds27 while the latter was charac- terized by the way he let his hair grow.28 Such attributes are indeed ascribed to the ecstatic prophets in Israel ( 2 Kgs 1 : 8 ; Zech 13 : 4 ...
... seems to be as- sociated with dirt and self - inflicted wounds27 while the latter was charac- terized by the way he let his hair grow.28 Such attributes are indeed ascribed to the ecstatic prophets in Israel ( 2 Kgs 1 : 8 ; Zech 13 : 4 ...
Side 39
... seems , therefore , that Ahab acted in a similar manner with his prophets and only after identical answers were given ( ph hd ) he de- cided to go to battle . Dream and Vision Another feature common to the prophecy in Mari and the Bible ...
... seems , therefore , that Ahab acted in a similar manner with his prophets and only after identical answers were given ( ph hd ) he de- cided to go to battle . Dream and Vision Another feature common to the prophecy in Mari and the Bible ...
Indhold
3 | |
21 | |
29 | |
Abraham Malamat | 50 |
29 | 57 |
The Message of the Prophets | 75 |
Westermann | 95 |
Introduction | 107 |
R R Wilson | 332 |
Ernest W Nicholson | 345 |
Thomas W Overholt | 354 |
R P Carroll | 377 |
Joseph Blenkinsopp | 392 |
The Developing Tradition | 413 |
Walther Zimmerli | 419 |
Ronald E Clements | 443 |
Walter Houston | 133 |
iii Prophecy and Poetry | 154 |
iv Rhetoric | 166 |
Fox | 176 |
v Metaphor | 191 |
John T Willis | 205 |
Michael Fishbane | 223 |
John Day | 230 |
viii Drama | 247 |
David F Payne | 263 |
Prophecy and Society | 273 |
Petersen | 279 |
A Graeme Auld | 289 |
Burke O Long | 308 |
H G M Williamson | 453 |
P R Ackroyd | 478 |
Otto Kaiser | 495 |
Brevard S Childs | 513 |
Prophecy after the Prophets | 523 |
F F Bruce | 539 |
Christopher T Begg | 547 |
John F A Sawyer | 563 |
Future Directions | 577 |
Robert P Gordon | 600 |
607 | |
619 | |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Alten Testament Amos Ancient Israel ARMT audience Babylon Babylonian Bible biblical book of Amos book of Isaiah book of Jeremiah book of Jonah canonical Carroll chap claim conflict context covenant criticism cultic Deutero-Isaiah Deuteronomic Deuteronomistic Deuteronomistic History discussion dissonance divine drama evidence example exile Ezek Ezekiel God's Hebrew Hebrew Bible Hezekiah Hosea interpretation Israelite Israelite prophecy Jehoiakim Jerusalem Jesaja Jonah Josephus JSOT Judah judgment king language later literary literature Lord Mari material meaning ment metaphor narrative nations Old Testament oracles original passage phetic post-exilic present priest priestly Priestly Blessing problem proclamation proph Propheten prophetic books prophetic word Psalms question reality recent redactional reference regarding religion religious rhetorical role scholars servant social society speak speech structure suggest temple theme theology tion tradition Tyre verb verse vision Yahweh YHWH Zedekiah Zephaniah
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