The book of Ezekiel may be effectively understood in terms of Jeffrey Alexander’s theory of cultural trauma, in which catastrophic events take on a wider cultural significance because they are perceived as having consequences for group identity. The book of Ezekiel develops a new master narrative of Israelite history and identity, in which the catastrophes of 597 and 586 BCE are the culmination of generations of moral and religious offences against Yhwh, the God of Israel. Ezekiel’s narrative constructs these events as having profound consequences for Israel’s identity. Those taken to Babylonia are identified as victims of divine violence; as victims, they are the ones whom Yhwh has chosen as true Israelites. The book distinguishes t...
The Song of Moses blames Israel for the idolatry that caused divine wrath and led to the people’s ne...
The prophetic books of Jeremiah and Ezekiel exhibit many similarities. From their historical setting...
Sociologist Kai Erikson defines collective trauma as a "blow" to one’s collective identity...
The written sources from the ancient Near East are for the most part authored from the perspective o...
CITATION: Claassens, L. J. 2017. Preaching the Pentateuch : reading Jeremiah’s sermons through the l...
My dissertation, Representing the Destruction of Jerusalem: Literary Artistry and the Shaping of Mem...
The images and genres as well as the structure of the Book of Ezekiel aim to promote symbolic thinki...
Ezekiel 20 retells Israel’s exodus narrative tradition (exodus from Egypt and entry into the land of...
Ezekiel 20 retells Israel’s exodus narrative tradition (exodus from Egypt and entry into the land of...
The book of Ezekiel bears witness to one of the most critical periods for Judean identity formation:...
CITATION: Biwul, J. K. T. 2019. The restoration of the dry bones in Ezekiel 37:1-14 : an exegetical ...
In addressing the theological crisis of the exile, Ezekiel relies on the mythology of the divine kin...
From a contemporary perspective, many of the colourful characters in the Hebrew Bible may have exper...
The Song of Moses blames Israel for the idolatry that caused divine wrath and led to the people’s n...
In addressing the theological crisis of the exile, Ezekiel relies on the mythology of the divine kin...
The Song of Moses blames Israel for the idolatry that caused divine wrath and led to the people’s ne...
The prophetic books of Jeremiah and Ezekiel exhibit many similarities. From their historical setting...
Sociologist Kai Erikson defines collective trauma as a "blow" to one’s collective identity...
The written sources from the ancient Near East are for the most part authored from the perspective o...
CITATION: Claassens, L. J. 2017. Preaching the Pentateuch : reading Jeremiah’s sermons through the l...
My dissertation, Representing the Destruction of Jerusalem: Literary Artistry and the Shaping of Mem...
The images and genres as well as the structure of the Book of Ezekiel aim to promote symbolic thinki...
Ezekiel 20 retells Israel’s exodus narrative tradition (exodus from Egypt and entry into the land of...
Ezekiel 20 retells Israel’s exodus narrative tradition (exodus from Egypt and entry into the land of...
The book of Ezekiel bears witness to one of the most critical periods for Judean identity formation:...
CITATION: Biwul, J. K. T. 2019. The restoration of the dry bones in Ezekiel 37:1-14 : an exegetical ...
In addressing the theological crisis of the exile, Ezekiel relies on the mythology of the divine kin...
From a contemporary perspective, many of the colourful characters in the Hebrew Bible may have exper...
The Song of Moses blames Israel for the idolatry that caused divine wrath and led to the people’s n...
In addressing the theological crisis of the exile, Ezekiel relies on the mythology of the divine kin...
The Song of Moses blames Israel for the idolatry that caused divine wrath and led to the people’s ne...
The prophetic books of Jeremiah and Ezekiel exhibit many similarities. From their historical setting...
Sociologist Kai Erikson defines collective trauma as a "blow" to one’s collective identity...