Micah: Introduction and Commentary
Carolyn J. Sharp
(Author)
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Description
Discover the historical, literary, and theological significance of the book of Micah Written by Carolyn J. Sharp, a leading scholar of biblical prophetic literature, this commentary provides scholars and preachers with a thorough overview of historical, literary, and theological dimensions of the book of Micah. The commentary also examines Micah's reception history by Jewish and Christian interpreters and considers Micah's witness as valuable for ecological ethics. The volume is part of the Eerdmans Illuminations series, in which authors employ the full range of biblical scholarship to illumine the text from a wide variety of perspectives, including the engagement and impact of the text through the centuries. Excerpt from the commentary: "In oracle after beautifully crafted oracle, through diverse and artful rhetorical means, Micah teaches his community to remain resilient through national and regional traumas; he urges them to engage in active resistance of the depredations of the elite and the violence of invading armies; he exhorts them to reform their understanding of YHWH's requirements for ethical life and faithful theological praxis; and he invites them to rejoice in the divine deliverance they had known in days of old and can envision for the future restoration of Zion. As contemporary readers and communities gather around the book of Micah, we too can find in its pages extraordinary resources for resilience, resistance, reformation, and rejoicing."
Product Details
Price
$64.99
$60.44
Publisher
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company
Publish Date
May 15, 2025
Pages
480
Dimensions
0.0 X 0.0 X 0.0 inches | 0.0 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780802868329
BISAC Categories:
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Carolyn J. Sharp is professor of homiletics at Yale Divinity School. Her research explores the poetics, narrative art, and theology of biblical texts as resources for homiletical theory and practice. Her books include a commentary on Jeremiah 26-52, a commentary on Joshua, The Prophetic Literature, Wrestling the Word: The Hebrew Scriptures and the Christian Believer, and Irony and Meaning in the Hebrew Bible. An Episcopal priest, she serves as Preacher in Residence at St. Thomas's Episcopal Church in New Haven, Connecticut.