Prophets, Prophecy and Ancient Israelite Historiography
Prophets, Prophecy and Ancient Israelite Historiography

Prophets, Prophecy and Ancient Israelite Historiography

by Bernon Lee, Gordon Oeste, Mark J. Boda, J. Richard Middleton, John Van Seters, Lissa M. Wray Beal, K. L. Noll, Paul S. Evans, Ehud Ben Zvi, Lisbeth S. Fried, David H. Shepherd, Andrew W. Pitts, Danielle Duperreault, Mark A. Leuchter, Brian Neil Peterson, Grace Ko, Ralph J. Korner, and Colin M. Toffelmire

Publisher Eisenbrauns
Published 2013
ISBN-13 9781575066899
The 18 essays by members of the Canadian Society for Biblical Studies published in this volume showcase the work of leading authorities on ancient Israelite and Jewish historiography as it intersects with the phenomenon of prophecy. A deep divide exists between the traditions of historiography and prophecy in the academic study of the Hebrew Bible, and the concern of the contributors is to close that gap, to expose the close relationship between these two traditions in the literature of the Hebrew Bible.

The first section of the book explores prophecy and prophets in ancient Israelite and Jewish historiographic books (Torah, Deuteronomistic History, Chronicles, Ezra–Nehemiah, Second Temple Jewish historiography). The second section surveys historiography in Israelite and Jewish prophetic books (Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Book of the Twelve, Daniel, 1 Enoch). The contributors engage diverse methodological perspectives in these studies, the goal first being to show the role that the prophets played within the great Hebrew historiographic works and, second, to demonstrate the role that historiography plays within the great Hebrew prophetic works; this makes it clear that the influence is bidirectional.

Prophets, Prophecy, and Ancient Israelite Historiography will be of value for advanced students and scholars working on historiographic and prophetic materials in the ancient Israelite and Jewish traditions, featuring the best of research and analysis and interacting with many major ancient literary traditions of historiography and prophecy.

  • Introduction
  • Part 1: Prophets and Prophecy in Israelite Historiographic Books
    • “Face to Face”: Moses as Prophet in Exodus 11:1–12:28 - Bernon Lee
    • The Shaping of a Prophet: Joshua in the Deuteronomistic History - Gordon Oeste
    • Recycling Heaven’s Words: Receiving and Retrieving Divine Revelation in the Historiography of Judges - Mark J. Boda
    • Samuel Agonistes: A Conflicted Prophet’s Resistance to God and Contribution to the Failure of Israel’s First King - J. Richard Middleton
    • Prophecy as Prediction in Biblical Historiography - John Van Seters
    • Jeroboam and the Prophets in 1 Kings 11–14: Prophetic Word for Two Kingdoms - Lissa M. Wray Beal
    • Presumptuous Prophets Participating in a Deuteronomic Debate - K. L. Noll
    • Prophecy Influencing History: Dialogism in the Chronicler’s Ahaz Narrative - Paul S. Evans
    • Chronicles and Its Reshaping of Memories of Monarchic Period Prophets: Some Observations - Ehud Ben Zvi
    • Deus ex Machina and Plot Construction in Ezra 1–6 - Lisbeth S. Fried
    • Is the Governor Also among the Prophets? Parsing the Purposes of Jeremiah in the Memory of Nehemiah - David Shepherd
    • The Use and Non-Use of Prophetic Literature in Hellenistic Jewish Historiography - Andrew W. Pitts
  • Part 2: Historiography in Israelite Prophetic Books
    • The Poetics of History and the Prophecy of Deutero-Isaiah - Danielle Duperreault
    • Personal Missives and National History: The Relationship between Jeremiah 29 and 36 - Mark Leuchter
    • Ezekiel’s Perspective of Israel’s History: Selective Revisionism? - Brian Peterson
    • The Ordering of the Twelve as Israel’s Historiography - Grace Ko
    • The “Exilic” Prophecy of Daniel 7: Does It Reflect Late Pre-Maccabean or Early Hellenistic Historiography? - Ralph J. Korner
    • (Re)Visionary History: Historiography and Religious Identity in the Animal Apocalypse - Colin M. Toffelmire
  • Index of Authors
  • Index of Scripture

Inner Books

This physical volume has several internal sections, each of which has been reviewed independently

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