The Book of the Former Prophets

By Thomas W. Mann

A fascinating commentary on the books from Joshua to 2 Kings, emphasising their strengths as narrative literature and their significance for the modern world.

ISBN: 9780227680100
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Description

The Former Prophets of the Hebrew Bible includes the books of Joshua through 2 Kings, a narrative of ancient Israel’s history of some seven hundred years from the conquest of Canaan to the exile, when Israel lost the land. From a critical perspective, the narrative is a composite document incorporating many different literary sources from different times; seen as a whole, the result is a compelling example of ancient historiography as well as an impressive artistic achievement. Included are fascinating (and often horrifying) stories of war, religious fanaticism, terror, and disaster, as well as stories of deep personal loyalty, friendship, and faith.

Many characters in the books of the Former Prophets are at once virtuous and villainous, such as King David: slayer of giants, writer of therapeutic songs, and builder of empire, who is also a permissive parent, a rapist, an adulterer, and a murderer. The books of the Former Prophets feature a witch who is far from wicked, and a religious reformer who slaughters the unorthodox. Even God makes an appearance as an evil spirit! These vivid personages inspired works of art and motivated groups, including the Pilgrims, who came to America to found communities like New Canaan. The Former Prophets also present parallels – often uncomfortable ones – to events in our own history from ethnic cleansing to tyrannical oppression. Yet the Former Prophets also picture the dream of a just and peaceful community that has motivated people of goodwill for thousands of years.

Through it all, Mann shows how the Former Prophets raise perennial questions: What is the relationship between divine sovereignty and human political institutions? How does a culture identify “insiders” and “outsiders”? In what sense are historical events the result of human acts and also of divine Providence? How does a nation come to terms with its failures as well as its triumphs?

Additional information

Dimensions 229 × 153 mm
Pages 456
Format

Trade Information JPOD

About the Author

Thomas W. Mann has taught religious studies at the college, seminary, and doctoral levels and served as a parish minister in the United Church of Christ. He is the author of The Book of the Torah (1988), to which this book is a sequel.

Contents

List of Excursuses
List of Figures
Preface
Abbreviations

Introduction

1. Joshua
2. Judges
3. Ruth
4. 1 Samuel
5. 2 Samuel
6. 1 Kings
7. 2 Kings

Summary and Conclusion

Glossary
Bibliography
Scripture Index

Extracts

Endorsements and Reviews

Having retold the first part of the Bible’s story of ancient Israel in his acclaimed The Book of the Torah, Thomas Mann now presents the second half with critical and theological acumen. The difficult themes and pictures are not glossed over, but Mann’s rich interpretive retelling opens up avenues into a contemporary appropriation of this story, on which, for better or for worse, the Christian community is grounded.
Patrick D. Miller, Princeton Theological Seminary, Emeritus

An amazing achievement. Lucidly, with illuminating parallels from modern times, Mann guides us superbly through vast terrain. He keeps the big picture always in view, yet has an unerring eye for the telling detail. He concisely explains disparate sources and historical background. But always the story, with its rich cast of characters, takes pride of place. We see complexities and ambiguities in narratives fraught with violence and we confront the challenges they present today’s reader. The final chapter, deeply thoughtful, critical, and constructive, lays out paths to better understand this great theological history as a work of theodicy, the struggle to comprehend God’s ways in a calamitous world. In Mann’s book, the ancient work has an excellent modern companion.
David M. Gunn, Texas Christian University

Mann’s volume will serve well for a college course in the historical books …
Trent C. Butler, in Review of Biblical Literature, March 2012

The book aims for a fairly broad readership, though it will perhaps be most suited to seminary courses where these books are taught. … provides rich material with which others will need to engage …
David G. Firth, in Review of Biblical Literature, August 2012

A literarily and theologically acute reading with historical sensitivity, straightforwardly arranged with one chapter per book.
Richard Briggs, in Biblical Studies Bulletin, Issue 66

The difficult themes and pictures are not glossed over, but Mann’s rich interpretive retelling opens up avenues into contemporary appropriation of this story, on which, for better or for worse, the Christian community is grounded.
Patrick D. Miller, in The American Journal of Biblical Theology, Vol 14, No 19

… an excellent undergraduate-level textbook … I have no hesitation in recommending this excellent book for teachers and students investigating Deuteronomistic History.
Paul Hedley Jones, Durham University, in Reviews in Religion and Theology, Vol 20, No 3

It is a readable book that combines Professor Thomas Mann’s several decades of study, research, teaching, and pastoral experiences. His lucid style, coupling biblical insights and modern-day events helps the readers to understand how the texts of the Former Prophets, namely Joshua, Judges, Ruth, 1 & 2 Samuel, and 1 & 2 Kings, can speak to our contemporary situation. This book is meant for graduate students and interested general readers. … I warmly recommend it to anyone who seeks to engage with the Former Prophets.
Daniel Jeyaraj, Liverpool Hope University, in Theological Book Review , Vol 25, No 1

Thomas Mann … takes a chapter for each book from Joshua to 2 Kings. He takes a literary-critical approach, looking at context, authorship, and editors, besides addressing big questions such as the relationship between God and human institutions, and the part played by divine Providence in human activity.
Church Times, 23 October 2015

The textbook from [Mann] is without a doubt reliable and offers numerous interesting thoughts to the current shape and intentions of the deuteronomistic history.
Jakob Woehrle, in Theologisch Literaturzeitung, No 139, Heft 2