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Covenant In The Persian Period From Genesis To Chronicles Richard J Bautch Editor Gary N Knoppers Editor

  • SKU: BELL-51830534
Covenant In The Persian Period From Genesis To Chronicles Richard J Bautch Editor Gary N Knoppers Editor
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Covenant In The Persian Period From Genesis To Chronicles Richard J Bautch Editor Gary N Knoppers Editor instant download after payment.

Publisher: Eisenbrauns
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.67 MB
Pages: 464
Author: Richard J. Bautch (editor); Gary N. Knoppers (editor)
ISBN: 9781575063577, 1575063573
Language: English
Year: 2015

Product desciption

Covenant In The Persian Period From Genesis To Chronicles Richard J Bautch Editor Gary N Knoppers Editor by Richard J. Bautch (editor); Gary N. Knoppers (editor) 9781575063577, 1575063573 instant download after payment.

The 22 essays in this new and comprehensive study explore how notions of covenant, especially the Sinaitic covenant, flourished during the Neo-Babylonian, Persian, and early Hellenistic periods. Following the upheaval of the Davidic monarchy, the temple’s destruction, the disenfranchisement of the Jerusalem priesthood, the deportation of Judeans to other lands, the struggles of Judeans who remained in the land, and the limited returns of some Judean groups from exile, the covenant motif proved to be an increasingly influential symbol in Judean intellectual life. The contributors to this volume, drawn from many different countries including Canada, Germany, Israel, South Africa, Switzerland, and the United States, document how Judean writers working within historiographic, Levitical, prophetic, priestly, and sapiential circles creatively reworked older notions of covenant to invent a new way of understanding this idea. These writers examine how new conceptions of the covenant made between YHWH and Israel at Mt. Sinai play a significant role in the process of early Jewish identity formation. Others focus on how transformations in the Abrahamic, Davidic, and Priestly covenants responded to cultural changes within Judean society, both in the homeland and in the diaspora. Cumulatively, the studies of biblical writings, from Genesis to Chronicles, demonstrate how Jewish literature in this period developed a striking diversity of ideas related to covenantal themes.

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