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The College Press NIV Commentary: Minor Prophets, Volume 2

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Overview

Part of the NIV based College Press Commentary series, which blends solid scholarship with practical usefulness, this second volume commentary on the Minor Prophets will be a helpful and reliable addition to your reference library. This volume contains the minor prophets from Nahum to Malachi.

The act of reading and interpreting the Bible requires contemporary readers to traverse from their world to the world of the text. However, a cultural distance between the two worlds complicates this journey. Biblical authors use images from ancient agriculture and warfare that are distant to modern readers. They refer to events, circumstances, geographical entities, and sociopolitical realities familiar to the text's original audience, but not part of a frame of reference for contemporary readers.

Both general Bible readers and others doing in-depth biblical research should find helpful this volume for diminishing or closing the distance between the biblical audience and contemporary readers. As a result, they may better read, understand, and be challenged by the messages of the prophets.

Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi are the final six books in a twelve-book collection often referred to as the Minor Prophets. This name refers to their relative brevity as opposed to their diminished significance. They circulated together with the first six books of the collection (Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, and Micah) in an anthology known to the Jews as the Book of the Twelve, the final book in the section of the Hebrew Scripture known as the Prophets.

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Top Highlights

“their primary objective is to elicit from the original audience trust in and obedience to Yahweh” (Page 18)

“Theologically vengeance relates to Yahweh’s holiness, which cannot allow sin and rebellion to go unpunished. In this sense, vengeance is the action that measures out justice. Without divine justice, divine mercy would lose its meaning.” (Page 53)

“The prophet portrays people as seeming to exist only for the Babylonians’ economic gratification. Worse still, the Babylonians attribute their success to their own military might.” (Page 134)

“ (כָּבַד‎, kābad) deals with acknowledging one’s ‘weight,’ that is, one’s importance, authority, or position.” (Page 535)

“he prophet’s name derives from a Hebrew word meaning ‘comfort,’ ‘consolation,’ or ‘compassion” (Page 31)

  • Title: The College Press NIV Commentary: Minor Prophets, Volume 2
  • Authors: Mark A. Hahlen and Clay A. Ham
  • Editors: Terry Briley and Paul J. Kissling
  • Publisher: College Press
  • Publication Date: 2006
  • Pages: 583

Dr. Mark Allen Hahlen has served as professor of Bible and Language at Dallas Christian College and as a visiting professor at Louisville Bible College since 1992. Before that, he served on the faculty of Louisville Bible College from 1985 to 1992. Dr. Hahlen received his M.Div. and Ph.D. from Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and his B.A. from Johnson Bible College. He has held youth and preaching ministries in Tennessee, Kentucky, and Texas. He and his wife Brenda live in Farmers Branch, TX, and have two children, Joshua and Miranda.

Dr. Clay Alan Ham has served as professor of New Testament and Preaching at Dallas Christian College since 1988. He is also a visiting professor at Lakeview Bible Seminary, Chennai, India. Dr. Ham received his Ph.D. from Southewestern Baptist Theological Seminary and his B.A. and M.Div. from Lincoln Christian College and Seminary. He is author of The Coming King and the Rejected Shepherd: Matthew's Reading of Zechariah's Messianic Hope. He and his wife Diane live in Flower Mound, TX, and have three children, Elizabeth, Emily and Allan.

Terry Briley, Ph. D., is an associate professor of Bible at Lipscomb University, Nashville, Tennessee, since 1986. Terry Briley received the B.A. from David Lipscomb College (now Lipscomb University), then a M.Phil. and Ph.D. from Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, Ohio. In addition to teaching at Lipscomb University, he is the Senior Minister at Natchez Trace Church of Christ and leads an annual summer mission trip to Brazil.

Paul J. Kissling, Ph.D. is Professor of Old Testament and Biblical Languages and Area Chair in Bible/Theology at Great Lakes Christian College, Lansing, Michigan. He is an elder at Meridian Christian Church in Okemos. Paul Kissling received the Bachelor's degree from Great Lakes Christian College, the M.Div. from Lincoln Christian Seminary, the Th.M. from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, and the Ph.D. from the University of Sheffield (England). Paul has taught and preached in over 15 countries and serves as Old Testament specialist on the Board of the Stone-Campbell Journal.

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  1. Scott Park

    Scott Park

    1/11/2018

    My favorite commentary!

$17.99

Digital list price: $21.99
Save $4.00 (18%)