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Micah: A New Translation with Introduction and Commentary

✍ Scribed by Bob Becking


Publisher
Yale University Press
Year
2023
Tongue
English
Leaves
298
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


A new translation and commentary on the biblical book of Micah that proposes a convincing new theory of its composition history

While the biblical book of Micah is most famous for its images of peaceβ€”swords turned to plowshares, spears turned to pruning hooksβ€”and its passages of prophetic hope, the book is largely composed of prophecies of ruin. The historical Micah, who scholars believe lived in the late eighth century BCE, is the first recorded prophet to predict the fateful fall of Jerusalem, and he also foretells the destruction of the regions of Samaria and Judah, in addition to the more well-known promises of Judah’s eventual restoration.

In this volume, Bob Becking provides a new translation of the Hebrew text and illuminates the book’s most important elements, paying special attention to its literary features, political context, and composition history. Drawing on ancient Near Eastern comparative evidence, archaeological notes, and inscriptions, Becking surveys debates surrounding the book’s interpretation and concludes that Micah uttered a variety of prophecies over the course of many years which a later redactor collected and molded into a proto-apocalyptic, alternating prophetic futurology.

✦ Table of Contents


Contents
Preface
Abbreviations
Introduction
I. The Aim of This Commentary
II. The Text of the Book of Micah
III. Ancient Readers of Micah
IV. Critical Scholarship on Micah
V. The Genesis of Micah
VI. Micah in History
VII. Forms and Gattungen
VIII. A New Proposal
IX. Reading Micah in 2021
Bibliography
Translation
Notes and comments
The Superscription (1:1)
Part I. A Distorting Prophecy (1:2–16)
Part II. A Prophetic Futurology (2–5)
Part III. A Pro-Josianic Treatise based on Pseudepigraphy (6–7)
Index of Subjects
Index of Modern Authors
Index of Ancient Sources


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