Vom Prophetinnenwort zum Prophetenbuch: Jesaja 8,3f im Kontext von Jesaja 6,1-8,16

The prophetess was a social reality in the Ancient Near East as well as in pre-exilic Israel and Juda. Isaiah 7,1-8,4 contains three prophecies originating in the year 734 BCE (Isaiah 7,4-7*; 7,14-16*; 8,3-4*). At least one of these (Isaiah 8,3-4*) was uttured by a female prophet. The prophetic book...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Knauf, Ernst Axel 1953- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:German
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Published: Univ. [2000]
In: Lectio difficilior
Year: 2000, Issue: 2
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Bible. Jesaja 6,1-8,16 / Bible. Jesaja 8,3-4 / Prophecy / Prophetess / Woman
IxTheo Classification:HB Old Testament
Online Access: Volltext (kostenfrei)
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Summary:The prophetess was a social reality in the Ancient Near East as well as in pre-exilic Israel and Juda. Isaiah 7,1-8,4 contains three prophecies originating in the year 734 BCE (Isaiah 7,4-7*; 7,14-16*; 8,3-4*). At least one of these (Isaiah 8,3-4*) was uttured by a female prophet. The prophetic books of the OT, on the other hand, are not the work of prophets, but of priests, scholars, and scribes, who made use of collections of prophetical sayings of the same kind as is attested in Assyria. In the case of Isaiah, the career of Isaiah as the fictitious author of a prophetical book started among oppositional circles during the reign of Manasseh, and came to an end, after various re-editions of the book, at the end of the 3rd century BCE. There is no prophetess among the canonical prophets, because politics and scholarship, at least in public, were male domains.
ISSN:1661-3317
Contains:Enthalten in: Lectio difficilior