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Prophets and Prophecy in the Ancient Near East (Texts)

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Overview

Prophecy was a widespread phenomenon, not only in ancient Israel but in the ancient Near East as a whole. This is the first book to gather the available ancient Near Eastern, extrabiblical sources containing prophetic words or references to prophetic activities. Among the 140 texts included in this volume are oracles of prophets, personal letters, formal inscriptions, and administrative documents from ancient Mesopotamia and Levant from the second and first millennia BCE. Most of the texts come from Mari (eighteenth century BCE) and Assyria (seventh century BCE). In addition, new translations of the relevant section of the Egyptian Report of Wenamon are provided by Robert K. Ritner, and C. L. Seow offers various texts from Syria-Palestine containing allusions to prophets and prophetic activities. By collecting and presenting evidence of the activities of prophets and the phenomenon of prophecy from all over the ancient Near East, the volume illumines the cultural background of biblical prophecy and its parallels. Scholars of the history, religions, and cultural traditions of the ancient Near East are given important information about different types and forms of transmission of divine words. These valuable primary source materials are made accessible in contemporary English, along with transcriptions of the original languages, indexes, and an extensive bibliography.

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  1. Matthew Saunders
    The books in this series are wonderful, and this one is no exception. However, the Logos edition has a few (unacceptable) typos which are not in the print edition. For example: 1. Amman Citadel Inscription, p. 202, line 5. Print edition reads 'bṭn kbh tkbh'. Logos edition reads 'ṭ tkbh' (omitting five letters!). 2. Lachish Ostracon 3, p. 214, reverse line 5. Print edition (correctly) reads 'šlḥh'. Logos edition reads 'šlhḥh'. 3. There are numerous spacing issues, where two words appear as one word, or vice versa. For example, in the Egyptian Report of Wemanon, p. 220, the print edition reads 'r ḏd' (two words, meaning 'saying') whereas Logos reads 'rḏd' (one word). This occurs five different times for this one series of words alone. See also e.g. Logos 'fḏd' written for printed 'f ḏd', etc. I haven't even gone through the Akkadian material yet, but probably will not use Logos to do so. Therefore, my five-star review is for the book itself, not for the Logos edition.

$9.99

Digital list price: $13.47
Save $3.48 (25%)