In the oracles against the nations in Amos 1-2, several acts of the nations are condemned as “transgressions” or “crimes”. The text mentions “threshing” one’s enemy, deportations and slave trade, acting in wrath and anger, expanding one’s territory by conquest, ripping open pregnant women, and desecrating corpses. Although these are clearly acts of violence, they are viewed as legitimate in some contexts. Gods and kings are practising them. It depends on the perspective. The author of Amos 1-2 sides with the victims and identifies the perspective of the victims with God’s perspective. This lays solid ground for the Book of Amos, in which the social violence of the powerful against the weak and vulnerable in Israelite society is judged in th...
The book of Amos, in a fashion almost preternaturally relevant to contemporary conditions, discusses...
The purpose of this chapter is to try to understand the textual characteristics of divine images. In...
The biblical text is replete with narratives of targeted killings (TKs), although it is not stated a...
In the oracles against the nations in Amos 1-2, several acts of the nations are condemned as "transg...
Prophet Amos was a great man of God whose message rattled but rarely influenced his contemporary to ...
This article applied rhetorical analysis to an analysis of Amos’ prophetic oracle against Israel’s s...
Violence in the Bible became a sore point in our times. There are thousands of killed enemies of Jew...
This short note discusses the nature and significance of the war crime “burning the bones of the d...
This study is an investigation of the book of Amos primarily using rhetorical criticism, built upon ...
How can a good God command genocide? In this short, accessible offering, Charlie Trimm provides the ...
<p class="abstract"><span lang="EN-US">Biblical traditions, in decisive form, are interested in the ...
This study of the biblical Book of Amos from Marxist and Freudian perspectives demonstrates that the...
The presence and use of the OT covenant(s) in the book of Amos has been a highly debated issue for t...
This redaction-critical study interprets the reasons for judgment in Amos 2.6-16 in the literary con...
Amos is sent by God to the Northern Kingdom to announce his condemnation on the people around them b...
The book of Amos, in a fashion almost preternaturally relevant to contemporary conditions, discusses...
The purpose of this chapter is to try to understand the textual characteristics of divine images. In...
The biblical text is replete with narratives of targeted killings (TKs), although it is not stated a...
In the oracles against the nations in Amos 1-2, several acts of the nations are condemned as "transg...
Prophet Amos was a great man of God whose message rattled but rarely influenced his contemporary to ...
This article applied rhetorical analysis to an analysis of Amos’ prophetic oracle against Israel’s s...
Violence in the Bible became a sore point in our times. There are thousands of killed enemies of Jew...
This short note discusses the nature and significance of the war crime “burning the bones of the d...
This study is an investigation of the book of Amos primarily using rhetorical criticism, built upon ...
How can a good God command genocide? In this short, accessible offering, Charlie Trimm provides the ...
<p class="abstract"><span lang="EN-US">Biblical traditions, in decisive form, are interested in the ...
This study of the biblical Book of Amos from Marxist and Freudian perspectives demonstrates that the...
The presence and use of the OT covenant(s) in the book of Amos has been a highly debated issue for t...
This redaction-critical study interprets the reasons for judgment in Amos 2.6-16 in the literary con...
Amos is sent by God to the Northern Kingdom to announce his condemnation on the people around them b...
The book of Amos, in a fashion almost preternaturally relevant to contemporary conditions, discusses...
The purpose of this chapter is to try to understand the textual characteristics of divine images. In...
The biblical text is replete with narratives of targeted killings (TKs), although it is not stated a...