The prophetic books of Jeremiah and Ezekiel exhibit many similarities. From their historical setting around the final days before Jerusalem's destruction and the deportation of its elite to Babylonia, to a large shared theological vocabulary, to a number of shared image-rich metaphors, these books have long invited scholars to explore their likenesses. And yet, the two books diverge sharply in their tone, their advice for how to live in Babylonia, and their vision for the future of YHWH's people. This article argues the divergence follows from distinctly different experiences of involuntary migration which these texts depict and to which, therefore, they respond
This article questions the theory that Targum Ezekiel holds a distinctive position within the corpus...
Set against the backdrop of the Babylonian Invasion and Exile, the Book of Jeremiah represents a var...
This study is a comparison of the book of Ezekiel with the well-known city lament genre of ancient M...
The patriarch Jacob is an involuntary migrant. Jacob lives as an asylum seeker from Esau’s threat of...
CITATION: Claassens, L. J. M. 2019. Going home? Exiles, inciles and refugees in the book of Jeremiah...
The book of Ezekiel may be effectively understood in terms of Jeffrey Alexander’s theory of cultura...
Seeking to contribute to the discussion of the booh of Jeremiah as a literary unity, this study exam...
The study of the book of Ezekiel is full of many problems. In limiting ourselves to a study of his l...
Although the prophet Jeremiah’s teachings are aligned with the other prophets of the Old Testament, ...
In addressing the theological crisis of the exile, Ezekiel relies on the mythology of the divine kin...
The written sources from the ancient Near East are for the most part authored from the perspective o...
Ezekiel’s sign-act of the two sticks is an interpretive quagmire. Interpretive issues include the as...
It has become common to describe the book of Ezekiel as radically theocentric. Whilst this is a help...
The book of Ezekiel is one of the prophetic books (Nevi’im) canonized in the Hebrew Bible. It is a t...
Although a number of issues related to involuntary migration feature in the Joseph narrative, the mo...
This article questions the theory that Targum Ezekiel holds a distinctive position within the corpus...
Set against the backdrop of the Babylonian Invasion and Exile, the Book of Jeremiah represents a var...
This study is a comparison of the book of Ezekiel with the well-known city lament genre of ancient M...
The patriarch Jacob is an involuntary migrant. Jacob lives as an asylum seeker from Esau’s threat of...
CITATION: Claassens, L. J. M. 2019. Going home? Exiles, inciles and refugees in the book of Jeremiah...
The book of Ezekiel may be effectively understood in terms of Jeffrey Alexander’s theory of cultura...
Seeking to contribute to the discussion of the booh of Jeremiah as a literary unity, this study exam...
The study of the book of Ezekiel is full of many problems. In limiting ourselves to a study of his l...
Although the prophet Jeremiah’s teachings are aligned with the other prophets of the Old Testament, ...
In addressing the theological crisis of the exile, Ezekiel relies on the mythology of the divine kin...
The written sources from the ancient Near East are for the most part authored from the perspective o...
Ezekiel’s sign-act of the two sticks is an interpretive quagmire. Interpretive issues include the as...
It has become common to describe the book of Ezekiel as radically theocentric. Whilst this is a help...
The book of Ezekiel is one of the prophetic books (Nevi’im) canonized in the Hebrew Bible. It is a t...
Although a number of issues related to involuntary migration feature in the Joseph narrative, the mo...
This article questions the theory that Targum Ezekiel holds a distinctive position within the corpus...
Set against the backdrop of the Babylonian Invasion and Exile, the Book of Jeremiah represents a var...
This study is a comparison of the book of Ezekiel with the well-known city lament genre of ancient M...