Berit Olam
This item is currently unavailable.
Enter your email address below and we will email you when the item comes into stock.
£35.99
Ezra-Nehemiah has been neglected in biblical studies, but it is important as one of the few windows into the Persian period of Israel's history, the setting for so much of the final shape of the Hebrew Bible. To know this period is to know what influenced these redactors. In Ezra and Nehemiah Gordon Davies provides that knowledge using rhetorical criticism, a methodology that reveals the full range and progress of the book's ideas without hiding its rough seams and untidy edges.
The purpose of rhetorical criticism is to explain not the source but the power of the text as a unitary message. This approach does not look at plot development, characterization, or other elements whose roughness makes Ezra-Nehemiah frustrating to read. Instead, it examines the three parts of the relationship - the strategies, the situations, and the effects - between the speaker and the audience. Rhetorical criticism's scrutiny of the audience in context favors the search for the ideas and structures that are indigenous to the culture of the text.
Rhetorical criticism is interested in figures of speech as means of persuasion. Therefore, to apply it to Ezra-Nehemiah, Davies concentrates on the public discourse - the orations, letters, and prayers - throughout its text. In each chapter he follows a procedure that: (1) where it is unclear, identifies the rhetorical unit in which the discourse is set; (2) identifies the audiences of the discourse and the rhetorical situation; (3) studies the arrangement of the material; (4) studies the effect on the various audiences; (5) reviews the passage as a whole and judges its success. In the conclusion, Davies explains that Ezra-Nehemiah makes theological sense on its own terms, by forming a single work in which a range of ideas is argued.
Biblical scholars as well as those interested in literary criticism, communication studies, rhetorical studies, ecclesiology, and homiletics will find Ezra and Nehemiah enlightening.
Chapters are Ezra 1:1-6," "Ezra 4:1-24," "Ezra 5:1-6: 15," "Ezra 7," "Ezra 9-10," "Nehemiah 1- 2," "Nehemiah 3-7," and "Nehemiah 8-10."
Gordon F. Davies is associate professor of Old Testament and dean of students at St. Augustine's Seminary of Toronto.
"Foreword vii
Abbreviations viii
Introduction ix
Ezra 1:1-6—Literal Translation 1
Chapter One: Ezra 1:1-6 3
Ezra 4:1-24—Literal Translation 14
Chapter Two: Ezra 4:1-24 17
Ezra 5:1—6:15 Literal Translation 25
?Chapter Three: Ezra 5:1-6:15 29
Ezra 7—Literal Translation 37
?Chapter Four: Ezra 7 41
Ezra 9-10—Literal Translation 50
?Chapter Five: Ezra 9-10 55
Nehemiah 1-2—Literal Translation 73
Chapter Six: Nehemiah 1-2 79
Chapter Seven: Nehemiah 3-7 97
Nehemiah 9—Literal Translation 105
Chapter Eight: Nehemiah 8-10 111
Conclusion 127
Bibliography 135
Subject Index 140
Scripture Index 143