Seminary Bookshelf Search

Prophetic Literature & The Books of the Prophets

This LibGuide provides researchers with a selection of introductory and intermediate resources on the Major and Minor Prophets of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament, along with resources on biblical prophecy in general.

For detailed commentaries on individual books of the Hebrew Bible, please visit the Hebrew Bible Commentaries LibGuide.

The resources listed here represent just a portion of the extensive offerings available through the Seminary Bookshelf. Use the search bar above to explore our full catalog and discover more resources on prophetic literature.

Subject: The Major and Minor Prophets

“This work assembles contributions from North America’s leading Hebrew Bible/Old Testament scholars in honor of a highly respected biblical scholar, whose work on biblical prophets has been especially influential. Within the list are former teachers, current colleagues, and former students who are now colleagues in their own right, representing a wide range of denominational traditions represented-Roman Catholics, Lutheran, Episcopal, Presbyterian, etc. The book is divided into major two sections with a brief introduction by the editors, John Ahn and the Stephen Cook. Here, a brief biography and the academic career of Robert Wilson’s contribution to the guild (with a bibliography at the end of this section) and more over, at a personal level, his ceaseless work in helping to transform and reform the “new” Yale Divinity School and his impact in molding the Ph.D. program in HB/OT in the Religious Studies Department of the Graduate School at Yale University. ” – T&T Clark

“Building on recent developments in biblical studies, this book introduces the prophetic literature of the Old Testament against the background of today’s postmodern context and crisis of meaning. Pulsating with anxiety over the empire–Assyrian, Babylonian, and Persian–the prophet corpus is a disturbing cultural expression of lament and chaos. Danger, disjunction, and disaster bubble beneath the surface of virtually every prophetic text. Sometimes in denial, sometimes in despair, and sometimes in defiance, the readers of this literature find themselves living at the edge of time, immediately before, during, or after the collapse of longstanding symbolic, cultural, and geo-political structures. These written prophecies not only reflect the social location of trauma, but are also a complex response. More specifically, prophetic texts are thick meaning-making maps, tapestries of hope that help at-risk communities survive.”- Abingdon Press

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