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Ezekiel 1-20 : a new translation with introduction and commentary / by Moshe Greenberg.

Contributor(s): Language: engheb Series: Bible ; v. 22.Publication details: Garden City, N.Y. : Doubleday, 1983.Edition: 1st edDescription: xv, 388 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0385009542
  • 9780385009546
Other title:
  • Society of Biblical Literature abbreviation for series: AB
Uniform titles:
  • Bible. Ezekiel, I-XX. English. Greenberg. 1983.
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 224/.4077 19
LOC classification:
  • BS192.2.A1 1964 .G3 vol. 22 BS1543
Other classification:
  • 11.41
Contents:
Introduction: -- The book of Ezekiel: its parts and arrangement -- The dates and the historical setting -- The method of this commentary: holistic interpretation -- Ezekiel's call: the vision (1.1-28b) -- Ezekiel's call: the commissioning (1:28b--3:15) -- The lookout (3:16-21) -- Confinement and symbolic acts (3:22--5:17) -- Doom upon the highland of Israel (6:1-14) -- The end of the civil order (7:1-27) -- The defiled temple and its abondonment (8:1--11:25) -- Symbolizing the exile (12:1-16) -- The coming terror (12:17-20) -- Discounting prophecy (12:21-28) -- Substitutes for true prophecy (13:1-23) -- God will not respond (14:1-11) -- An exception to the rule (14:12-23) -- The vinestock and Jerusalem (15:1-8) -- Jerusalem the wanton (16:1-63) -- The fable of the two eagles (17:1-24) -- Divine justice and repentance (18:1-31) -- A dirge over the kings of Israel (19:1-14) -- Threat of a second exodus (20:1-44) -- v. 22A. chapters 21-37 -- God's sword (21:1-37) -- Jerusalem all defiled and corrupt (22:1-31) -- The wanton sisters (23:1-49) -- The filthy pot (24:1-14) -- Disaster that constrains and releases (24:15-27) -- Against four bad neighbors (25:1-17) -- Tyre wiped out (26:1-21) -- The shipwreck of Tyre (27:1-36) -- The fall of Tyre's hubristic leader (28:1-10) -- The fall of Tyre's king: a mythical version (28:11-19) -- Sidon's doom; God's vindication (28:20-26) -- Egypt's fall and restoration (29:1-16) -- An amendment to the Tyre oracles (29:17-21) -- Egypt's doomsday (30:1-19) -- Egypt disarmed, Babylon armed (30:20-26) -- Assyria a lesson to Egypt (31:1-18) -- A dirge over Pharaoh (32:1-16) -- Pharaoh in the netherworld (32:17-32) -- Doom prophecy is a call to repent (33:1-20) -- Release from dumbness (33:21-22) -- Unregenerate communities (33: 23-33) -- Shepherds bad and good (34:1-31) -- Reclaiming and renewing the land (35:1--36:15) -- Restoration for the sake of God (36:16-38) -- The resurrectional metaphor of national restoration (37:1-14) -- Reuniting the two kingdoms of Israel and Judah (37:15-28).
Summary: The Anchor Bible Commentary is the collaborative effort of Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish scholars from around the world.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Academic Resource Center at Levitt General Stacks (LOWER Level) BS 192.2 .A1 1964 G3 V.22 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 24963

Includes bibliographical references (pages 28-34).

Introduction: -- The book of Ezekiel: its parts and arrangement -- The dates and the historical setting -- The method of this commentary: holistic interpretation -- Ezekiel's call: the vision (1.1-28b) -- Ezekiel's call: the commissioning (1:28b--3:15) -- The lookout (3:16-21) -- Confinement and symbolic acts (3:22--5:17) -- Doom upon the highland of Israel (6:1-14) -- The end of the civil order (7:1-27) -- The defiled temple and its abondonment (8:1--11:25) -- Symbolizing the exile (12:1-16) -- The coming terror (12:17-20) -- Discounting prophecy (12:21-28) -- Substitutes for true prophecy (13:1-23) -- God will not respond (14:1-11) -- An exception to the rule (14:12-23) -- The vinestock and Jerusalem (15:1-8) -- Jerusalem the wanton (16:1-63) -- The fable of the two eagles (17:1-24) -- Divine justice and repentance (18:1-31) -- A dirge over the kings of Israel (19:1-14) -- Threat of a second exodus (20:1-44) -- v. 22A. chapters 21-37 -- God's sword (21:1-37) -- Jerusalem all defiled and corrupt (22:1-31) -- The wanton sisters (23:1-49) -- The filthy pot (24:1-14) -- Disaster that constrains and releases (24:15-27) -- Against four bad neighbors (25:1-17) -- Tyre wiped out (26:1-21) -- The shipwreck of Tyre (27:1-36) -- The fall of Tyre's hubristic leader (28:1-10) -- The fall of Tyre's king: a mythical version (28:11-19) -- Sidon's doom; God's vindication (28:20-26) -- Egypt's fall and restoration (29:1-16) -- An amendment to the Tyre oracles (29:17-21) -- Egypt's doomsday (30:1-19) -- Egypt disarmed, Babylon armed (30:20-26) -- Assyria a lesson to Egypt (31:1-18) -- A dirge over Pharaoh (32:1-16) -- Pharaoh in the netherworld (32:17-32) -- Doom prophecy is a call to repent (33:1-20) -- Release from dumbness (33:21-22) -- Unregenerate communities (33: 23-33) -- Shepherds bad and good (34:1-31) -- Reclaiming and renewing the land (35:1--36:15) -- Restoration for the sake of God (36:16-38) -- The resurrectional metaphor of national restoration (37:1-14) -- Reuniting the two kingdoms of Israel and Judah (37:15-28).

The Anchor Bible Commentary is the collaborative effort of Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish scholars from around the world.

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