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The prophets Haggai and Zechariah, near contemporaries, were active
at a critical period in Israel's history. The recently restored
Jerusalem community had come through national downfall and exile.
Its religious and sociopolitical identity in the Persian Empire had
to be established. This volume offers a thematic study of the
prophetic response to that situation. The prophets, their status
and their styles of prophecy are compared with those of their
predecessors, as are their attitudes towards Israel's religious
traditions. Their theological understanding of proper leadership,
divine judgment, and Israel's relationship to other nations is
compared with the developing theology of the classical prophets.
The purpose is to discover whether Haggai, Zechariah and their
tradents demonstrate continuity with, or divergence from, the
prophetic traditions in which they stood. This study concludes that
Haggai is a traditionalist, while Zechariah emerges as an
innovative and radical theologian ahead of his time.
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