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Isaiah 40-66 : translation and commentary / Shalom M. Paul. [print]

By: Material type: TextTextLanguage: English, Hebrew Series: Eerdmans critical commentaryPublication details: Grand Rapids, Michigan : Eerdmans, (c)2012.Description: xiii, 714 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0802826032
  • 9780802826039
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • BS1515.53.P324.I835 2012
  • BS1515.53.P324.I835 2012
Available additional physical forms:
  • COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:
Contents:
Commentary.
IndianaTRODUCTION: Deutero-Isaiah Trito-Isaiah? Historical survey Excursus A: Prayer of Nabonidus Excursus B: Cyrus Cylinder Rishonot and hadashot Servant songs Attitudes toward foreigners and religious universalism Deutero-Isaiah, polemicist Descriptions of Jerusalem Descriptions of God, his attributes, and his relationship to his people Unique style and literary sequence Language of the book: Aramaic and late Hebrew Inner-biblical traditions reflected in Deutero-Isaiah Influence of First Isaiah on Deutero-Isaiah Influence of Jeremiah on Deutero-Isaiah Additional prophetic influences on Deutero-Isaiah Psalmic influences on Deutero-Isaiah . Parallels between the book of Lamentations and Deutero-Isaiah Deutero-Isaiah and the literary heritage of the ancient Near East Isaiah scrolls from Qumran and ancient translations Deutero-Isaiah in Jewish liturgy
Translation
Review: "This Eerdmans Critical Commentary volume is Shalom Paul's comprehensive, all-inclusive study of the oracles of an anonymous prophet known only as Second Isaiah who prophesied in the second half of the sixth century B.C.E. Paul examines Isaiah 40-66 through a close reading of the biblical text, offering thorough exegesis of the historical, linguistic, literary, and theological aspects of the prophet's writings. He also looks carefully at intertextual influences of earlier biblical and extrabiblical books, draws on the contributions of medieval Jewish commentators, and supports the contention that Second Isaiah should include chapters 55-66, thus eliminating the need to demarcate a Third Isaiah."--Publisher's description.
Item type: Reference (Library Use ONLY) List(s) this item appears in: Izzy- Reference
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Reference (Library Use ONLY) G. Allen Fleece Library Reference (1st floor - front of library) RES BS1515.53.I83.P38 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available HEB6220 31923001788658

Commentary.

IndianaTRODUCTION: Deutero-Isaiah Trito-Isaiah? Historical survey Excursus A: Prayer of Nabonidus Excursus B: Cyrus Cylinder Rishonot and hadashot Servant songs Attitudes toward foreigners and religious universalism Deutero-Isaiah, polemicist Descriptions of Jerusalem Descriptions of God, his attributes, and his relationship to his people Unique style and literary sequence Language of the book: Aramaic and late Hebrew Inner-biblical traditions reflected in Deutero-Isaiah Influence of First Isaiah on Deutero-Isaiah Influence of Jeremiah on Deutero-Isaiah Additional prophetic influences on Deutero-Isaiah Psalmic influences on Deutero-Isaiah . Parallels between the book of Lamentations and Deutero-Isaiah Deutero-Isaiah and the literary heritage of the ancient Near East Isaiah scrolls from Qumran and ancient translations Deutero-Isaiah in Jewish liturgy

Translation

"This Eerdmans Critical Commentary volume is Shalom Paul's comprehensive, all-inclusive study of the oracles of an anonymous prophet known only as Second Isaiah who prophesied in the second half of the sixth century B.C.E. Paul examines Isaiah 40-66 through a close reading of the biblical text, offering thorough exegesis of the historical, linguistic, literary, and theological aspects of the prophet's writings. He also looks carefully at intertextual influences of earlier biblical and extrabiblical books, draws on the contributions of medieval Jewish commentators, and supports the contention that Second Isaiah should include chapters 55-66, thus eliminating the need to demarcate a Third Isaiah."--Publisher's description.

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