The prophet Haggai advocated for the rebuilding of the temple,
destroyed by Babylon, in the tumultuous period of reconstruction under
Persian dominion; so much is evident from a surface reading of the
book . John Robert Barker goes further, using rhetorical criticism of
the prophet‘s arguments to tease out the probable attitudes and
anxieties among the Yehudite community that saw rebuilding as both
undesirable and unfeasible. While some in the community accepted the
prophet‘s claim that YHWH wanted the temple built, others feared
that adverse agricultural and economic conditions, as well as the lack
of a royal builder, were clear signs that YHWH did not approve or
authorize the effort. Haggai‘s counterarguments-that YHWH would
provide for the temple‘s adornment, would bring prosperity to Yehud
once the temple was built, and had designated the Davidide Zerubbabel
as the chosen royal builder-are combined with his vilification of
opponents as unclean and non-Israelite. Barker‘s study thus allows
Haggai to shed further light on the socioeconomic conditions of early
Persian-period Yehud.
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A Rhetorical Analysis of the Book of Haggai
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781506438429
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Stylus Publishing LLC
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok