Status
Available
Call number
Collections
Publication
HarperPerennial, New York
Description
The Prophets provides a unique opportunity for readers of the Old Testament, both Christian and Jewish, to gain fresh and deep knowledge of Israel's prophetic movement. The author's profound understanding of the prophets also opens the door to new insight into the philosophy of religion.
User reviews
LibraryThing member Priory
Abraham Heschel is a seminal name in religious studies and the author of "Man Is Not Alone" and "God in Search of Man." When "The Prophets" was first published in 1962, it was immediately recognized as a masterpiece of biblical scholarship."The Prophets" provides a unique opportunity for readers of
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the Old Testament, both Christian and Jewish, to gain fresh and deep knowledge of Israel's prophetic movement. The author's profound understanding of the prophets also opens the door to new insight into the philosophy of religion. Show Less
LibraryThing member StephenBarkley
The Hebrew prophets are fascinating. They were an important part of Israel's life, yet they often spoke of their rulers in very unflattering terms. When national life turned sour, the prophets were there to interpret geopolitical events from God's perspective.
"History to us is the record of human
In other words:
"Prophecy, then, may be described as exegesis of existence from a divine perspective" (xxvii).
Abraham Heschel's lengthy study on the prophets is poetic and insightful. The first half of the book is a survey of the various prophets and the main themes that consumed them. If you have ever struggled with reading the prophets, these chapters are a goldmine of information and inspiration.
The second half of the book is concerned with the prophets themselves. How is it that humans can speak for God? The answer centres on Heschel's idea of God's pathos. For Heschel, the Holy One of Israel, Maker of heaven and earth, is utterly transcendent. God never reveals himself to humans. Instead, he reveals his pathos.
The pathos of God is his heart of God for man, which takes on various forms such as "love and anger, grief and joy, mercy and wrath" (618). This is what the prophet engages when he or she encounters God. From the perspective of a prophet:
"God's presence is my first thought; His unity and transcendence, my second; His concern and involvement (justice and compassion), my third" (619).
Prophets are so in touch with God, they are able to sympathize with God's pathos. Matters which may seem small to humans such as imbalanced scales take on cosmic importance when viewed through God's justice.
The prophets are so moved by their encounters with God that they can seem unhinged to the rest of the world. Unlike the diviners of other contemporary cultures, however, they are not mad. The Hebrew prophets did not lose themselves in some sort of mystical absorption into the divine. Prophets (like Habakkuk, for example) can engage God in dialogue. They bring their own lives into the prophetic process.
I need to challenge Heschel on one point. He insists that the prophets never encounter the transcendent God. Instead, they encounter God-towards-man, or God's pathos. "Revelation means, not that God makes Himself known, but that He makes His will known" (620). From a Christian perspective, the miracle of the incarnation is precisely that God has made Himself known in Jesus. In a very real sense, Jesus is the pathos of God made flesh.
Heschel's comprehensive study of the Hebrew Prophets deserves continued engagement today.
"History to us is the record of human
Show More
experience; to the prophet it is a record of God's experience" (219).In other words:
"Prophecy, then, may be described as exegesis of existence from a divine perspective" (xxvii).
Abraham Heschel's lengthy study on the prophets is poetic and insightful. The first half of the book is a survey of the various prophets and the main themes that consumed them. If you have ever struggled with reading the prophets, these chapters are a goldmine of information and inspiration.
The second half of the book is concerned with the prophets themselves. How is it that humans can speak for God? The answer centres on Heschel's idea of God's pathos. For Heschel, the Holy One of Israel, Maker of heaven and earth, is utterly transcendent. God never reveals himself to humans. Instead, he reveals his pathos.
The pathos of God is his heart of God for man, which takes on various forms such as "love and anger, grief and joy, mercy and wrath" (618). This is what the prophet engages when he or she encounters God. From the perspective of a prophet:
"God's presence is my first thought; His unity and transcendence, my second; His concern and involvement (justice and compassion), my third" (619).
Prophets are so in touch with God, they are able to sympathize with God's pathos. Matters which may seem small to humans such as imbalanced scales take on cosmic importance when viewed through God's justice.
The prophets are so moved by their encounters with God that they can seem unhinged to the rest of the world. Unlike the diviners of other contemporary cultures, however, they are not mad. The Hebrew prophets did not lose themselves in some sort of mystical absorption into the divine. Prophets (like Habakkuk, for example) can engage God in dialogue. They bring their own lives into the prophetic process.
I need to challenge Heschel on one point. He insists that the prophets never encounter the transcendent God. Instead, they encounter God-towards-man, or God's pathos. "Revelation means, not that God makes Himself known, but that He makes His will known" (620). From a Christian perspective, the miracle of the incarnation is precisely that God has made Himself known in Jesus. In a very real sense, Jesus is the pathos of God made flesh.
Heschel's comprehensive study of the Hebrew Prophets deserves continued engagement today.
Show Less
LibraryThing member M.J.Perry
This was the first work of Abraham Heschel I read, and I fell in love. The teachings, the lives, the struggles, the dreams and the hopes of the prophets all became so real and alive. Complexities became understandable, and the bizarre was made relevant.
I refer to this book as a reference book,
I refer to this book as a reference book,
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again and again however, it is also a good read. I love just to pick it up and enjoy. Show Less
Language
Original publication date
1962
Physical description
704 p.; 5.22 x 1.2 inches
ISBN
0060936991 / 9780060936990
Other editions
The Prophets by Abraham Joshua Heschel (Paper Book)
Similar in this library
The Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew and English lexicon : based on the lexicon of William Gesenius, as translated by Edward Robinson, and edited with constant reference to the thesaurus of Gesenius as completed by E. Rödiger, and with authorized use of the German editions of Gesenius' Handwörterbuch über das Alte Testament by Francis Brown