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- These books--Isaiah through Malachi--respond to three key moments in Israel's history: the end of the Northern Kingdom in 722 BCE, the end of the Southern Kingdom in 587 BCE, and the beginning of the restoration from the Babylonian exile in 538 BCE.
library.sebts.edu/c.php?g=539489&p=4503597
Where did the Bible come from? Traditionally, Jews have claimed that all five books of the Torah were revealed to Moses on Mount Sinai. The prophets were the authors of their own books as well as others that are attributed to them (Lamentations is attributed to the prophet Jeremiah), and Kings David and Solomon each wrote several works (eg.
As Judaism developed, the books of the prophets shaped many other aspects of the tradition, most especially the concept of the messianic era, which was rooted in the world of the prophets. Later on, Jewish mysticism took its cue from the prophetic visions of Isaiah and Ezekiel.
Prophets appear all throughout the monarchy and into the postexilic period, when Jewish tradition believed prophecy had ceased. Yet, prophets reappear in the New Testament and early church: Anna the prophetess, John the Baptist, Jesus, and others.
Sep 13, 2024 · The Hebrew Bible is organized into three main sections: the Torah, or “Teaching,” also called the Pentateuch or the “Five Books of Moses”; the Neviʾim, or Prophets; and the Ketuvim, or Writings.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Jan 9, 2010 · The origins of prophecy in Israel; Three classical prophets: Amos, Hosea and Micah; The Isaiah tradition; An alternative prophetic tradition? Visionary experience in Jeremiah; The Ezekiel tradition: prophecy in a time of crisis; The prophets of the restoration; Prophecy and the emergence of the Jewish apocalypses; Prophecy and wisdom; Prophecy ...
- J. R. Porter
- 1982
Separation of the Pentateuch as Torah resulted in the isolation of Joshua–Kings. Positioned as the Former Prophets in the Hebrew canon, these books precede the prophetic works denominated as the Latter Prophets (i.e., Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the Minor or Twelve Prophets).
Jeremiah was one of the major prophets of the Bible whose life and sayings are collected in the biblical book that bears his name. His prophecies, among the most stark and pessimistic in all of biblical literature, were aimed as a rebuke to Jews who had surrendered to idolatry and depravity.