Tải bản đầy đủ (.pdf) (4 trang)

Jensens survey of the old testament adam 277

Bạn đang xem bản rút gọn của tài liệu. Xem và tải ngay bản đầy đủ của tài liệu tại đây (118.71 KB, 4 trang )

universe
3. nature of man
4. sin of man
5. way of salvation; fellowship with God;
and worship of God
6. origins and early history of Israel; and
prophecies of Israel in the end times
7. philosophy of world history throughout
all time
8. prophecies of Christ
9. daily conduct acceptable to God
10. qualities of acceptable service of God,
including the mission of the evangel to
lost souls
VI. SELECTED READING
GENERAL INTRODUCTION

Archer, Gleason L. A Survey of Old Testament
Introduction, pp. 416-17.


Earle, Ralph. Meet the Minor Prophets.
Ellison, H. L. The Old Testament Prophets, pp.
133-36.
Freeman, Hobart E. An Introduction to the Old
Testament Prophets, pp. 347-55.
Rendtorff, Rolf. God’s History, pp. 65-77.
COMMENTARIES

Baldwin, Joyce G. Haggai, Zechariah,
Malachi.


Goddard, Burton L. “Malachi.” In The
Wycliffe Bible Commentary.
Keil, Carl Frederich. The Twelve Minor
Prophets, vol. 2.
Perowne, T. T. Malachi. The Cambridge
Bible for Schools and Colleges.
Robinson, George. The Twelve Minor
Prophets.


1. The prophets also preached many, if not all,
of the message they were divinely inspriced to
write.
2. If Jeremiah’s prophecy (Jer 25:11-12;
29:10) is interpreted from an ecclesiastical
standpoint, with the Temple as the key object,
then the seventy-year period extended from the
destruction of the Temple in 586 B.C. to the year
of completion of its reconstruction, which was
516 B.C.
3. Most of the dates of Chart 57 are those of
John C. Whitcomb’s chart, Old Testament Kings
and Prophets.
4. J. Mcllmoyle, “Haggai,” in The New Bible
Commentary, p. 743.
5. Other factors, besides the Samaritans’
harassments, caused the Jews to stop working
on the Temple. Among these were: (1) the
people’s earlier adjustment to worshiping
without a temple when they were in Babylon;

(2) their disillusionment upon returning, to nd
mostly desolation, hostility, and hardship; (3)


poverty resulting from failure of crops; (4)
preoccupation with their own building projects.
(See Hobart E. Freeman, An Introduction to the
Old Testament Prophets, p. 329.)
6. Verses 6-23 of chapter 4 are parenthetical,
referring to the Samaritans’ later opposition to
building Jerusalem’s walls, during the reigns of
Ahasuerus (486-464) and Artaxerxes (464-423).
7. Gleason L. Archer, A Survey of Old
Testament Introduction, p. 408.
8. From Frank E. Gaebelein, Four Minor
Prophets, p. 244.
9. George L. Robinson, “The Book of
Zechariah,” in The International Standard Bible
Encyclopedia, 5: 3136.
10. Ezra 5:1 says Zechariah was a son of Iddo.
In Jewish terminology, “son of often had the
wider designation of “descendant of.” It is
possible that Berechiah died before Iddo,
causing Ezra to identify Zechariah with the
surviving ancestor of the priestly line.



×