The Lost Letters to the Twelve Prophe..., Dr. John Goldingay
The Lost Letters to the Twelve Prophe..., Dr. John Goldingay
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The Lost Letters to the Twelve Prophets
Imagining the Minor Prophets' World

Author: Dr. John Goldingay

Narrator: Alan Irving, Angharad Price

Unabridged: 7 hr 24 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/19/2022


Synopsis

Understand the Prophets Like Never Before with Amazing Insights from One of Today's Foremost Old Testament ScholarsFor many Christians reading the Old Testament, trying to understand Israel's prophets is like listening to just one side of a phone conversation--you only get half the idea of it. You hear the answer, but how do you know what question the prophet is answering?In The Lost Letters to the Twelve Prophets, John Goldingay uncovers the questions behind the prophets' answers that make their meaning and relevance intelligible to us. Written as a series of imaginary letters to the twelve Minor Prophets, The Lost Letters to the Twelve Prophets asks the kinds of questions that Hosea, Micah, Zechariah, and others were answering. The letters make clear the issues these prophets of Israel were dealing with or deliver the news they were responding to in their Old Testament writings. For example,To Hosea: Why did you marry someone you knew might be unfaithful?To Joel: It looks as if a locust epidemic is on the way: what should we do?To Amos: What should we do about the war crimes of peoples around us?To Obadiah: The Edomites have occupied our land and pushed us out: what's up with that?To Jonah: When is God going to fulfill his undertaking to destroy Nineveh?To Micah: Will God always be angry with us as a people?To Nahum: When is God going to fulfill his undertaking to destroy Nineveh?To Habakkuk: When is God going to do something about injustice in Judah?To Zephaniah: What do you mean by "the day of the Lord"?To Haggai: When is God going to fulfill his promises about rebuilding the temple?To Zechariah: Should Jeshua be High Priest when he has been in an unclean land?To Malachi: Why does serving God seem pointless?These and other questions help readers peer behind the veil of Minor Prophets' utterances and unlock their significance for today's Christians. Each chapter:begins with a brief paragraph of background about the prophetrecounts questions or reports that have been addressed to the prophet in the form of a lettersums up message of the prophet responding to that questionoffers a brief comment or explanation after each passageThe Lost Letters to the Twelve Prophets offers an imaginative, fun, and engaging way for students, pastors, and all serious Bible readers get a better grip on what is happening in these often misunderstood biblical books and get more out of their Bible reading and study.

About Dr. John Goldingay

John Goldingay (PhD, University of Nottingham; DD, Archbishop of Canterbury at Lambeth) is professor of Old Testament at Fuller Theological Seminary, but lives in Oxford, England. His numerous books include An Introduction to the Old Testament, A Reader’s Guide to the Bible, Reading Jesus’s Bible, and commentaries on Psalms, Isaiah, and Daniel. He has also authored Biblical Theology, the three-volume Old Testament Theology, and the seventeen-volume Old Testament for Everyone series, and has published a translation of the entire Old Testament called The First Testament: A New Translation.  


Reviews

Goodreads review by Michael on March 26, 2024

I wanted to like this book more than I did. I’m grateful for Goldingay’s imaginative exegesis and his expertise on bringing the prophets’ world to life in his “background and foreground” sections. But the end result was choppy, difficult to follow along with, and his translation didn’t help anything......more

Goodreads review by Brett on May 31, 2024

This book in some senses undermines its goal in its execution, but is a worthwhile read for those interested in learning about the cultures into which the minor prophets spoke. Each chapter is a series of imagined letters between real or imagined people and the minor prophet in question. This is a cl......more

Goodreads review by Nathan on December 24, 2023

Clever approach and I enjoyed it, but it has its drawbacks. Weaknesses: 1. For the book to work, Goldingay has to assume his own interpretations of the text, so the reader is left largely unaware of other perspectives on certain critical or interpretive difficulties. 2. Some of the prophetic texts do......more

Goodreads review by Jonathan on November 07, 2022

This was an "ok" book. Sometimes, in an effort to keep his translation fresh, Goldingay's translation is a bit distracting. The treatments of each prophet is a little uneven. But it would be a better introduction for the novice than a bunch of commentaries.......more

Goodreads review by Quincy on February 20, 2025

Some cool background but I feel like a lot more creative effort could have gone into the framing device as the letters seem so off-tone and unrelated in culture.......more