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About this book
The commentary interprets Jeremiah 1-25 as a dramatic text: In laments, accusations, and announcements of doom, a polyphonic message about the fall of Jerusalem and Judah emerges. The colorful and at times disturbing texts narrate a cultural trauma and try to develop an image of God that can explain history and at the same time convey hope for a better future. The female personification of Jerusalem provides an emotional and compassionate portrait of the people, giving voice to their experience of wartime violence and destruction. The persecuted prophet Jeremiah wrestles with God on behalf of the people.
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Yes, you can access Jeremiah 1-25 by Christl Maier, Linda M. Maloney,Walter Dietrich,David M. Carr,Adele Berlin,Erhard Blum,Irmtraud Fischer,Shimon Gesundheit,Walter Groß,Gary N. Knoppers,Bernard M. Levinson,Ed Noort,Helmut Utzschneider,Beate Ego in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Biblical Commentary. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Table of contents
- Deckblatt
- Impressum
- Editors’ Foreword
- Author’s Foreword
- Introduction to Jeremiah 1–25
- Jeremiah 1:1–19: The Prophet Jeremiah and His Mission
- Jeremiah 2:1–4:2: The Significance for Judah of Israel’s Defection
- Jeremiah 4:3–6:30: The Announcement of the Enemy from the North
- Jeremiah 7:1–8:3: Critique of the Temple and of Other Cults
- Jeremiah 8:4–10:25: Reasons for and Lament over the End
- Jeremiah 11:1–13:27: Reflections on Jerusalem’s End
- Jeremiah 14:1–17:27: Discourses on Suffering and Catastrophe
- Jeremiah 18:1–20:18: Jeremiah Embodies the Fall
- Jeremiah 21:1–24:10: Words against Judah’s Kings and Leaders
- Jeremiah 25:1–38: Jeremiah’s Message and ’s Judgment on the Nations
- Abbreviations
- Bibliography
- Indexes
- Plan of volumes