The People's Bible Commentary - Hosea to Micah: A Bible commentary for every day
The People's Bible Commentary - Hosea to Micah: A Bible commentary for every day

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The People's Bible Commentary - Hosea to Micah: A Bible commentary for every day

Author : Paula Gooder
£8.99

The six prophetic books that run from Hosea to Micah make a distinctly odd collection, from the well-known and serious prophetic writings of Hosea and Amos to Jonah, a light-hearted story of prophetic disaster. Then there is Obadiah, a book that most people would struggle to find, and know hardly anything about. So what connects them all?


Please note that this book is no longer in print, but is available as a digital download (PDF).

Title The People's Bible Commentary - Hosea to Micah: A Bible commentary for every day
Author Paula Gooder
Description

The six prophetic books that run from Hosea to Micah make a distinctly odd collection, from the well-known and serious prophetic writings of Hosea and Amos to Jonah, a light-hearted story of prophetic disaster. Then there is Obadiah, a book that most people would struggle to find, and know hardly anything about. So what connects them all?

Although the texts come from different times, different places and different prophets, they tell the same story. It is the story of the roller-coaster ride of God's relationship with his people, a story that looks back to God's action in the past and forward to what he will do in the future, in order to make sense of what is happening in the present. Throughout it all is the pulsing theme of God's great and abiding love for his people, and also his concern for other nations and how they relate to his plan for history.

Details
  • Product code: DOWN2452
  • Published: 18 February 2005
  • Format: PDF Download

The six prophetic books that run from Hosea to Micah make a distinctly odd collection, from the well-known and serious prophetic writings of Hosea and Amos to Jonah, a light-hearted story of prophetic disaster. Then there is Obadiah, a book that most people would struggle to find, and know hardly anything about. So what connects them all?

Although the texts come from different times, different places and different prophets, they tell the same story. It is the story of the roller-coaster ride of God's relationship with his people, a story that looks back to God's action in the past and forward to what he will do in the future, in order to make sense of what is happening in the present. Throughout it all is the pulsing theme of God's great and abiding love for his people, and also his concern for other nations and how they relate to his plan for history.

Dr Paula Gooder is a part-time tutor at the Queen's Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education in Birmingham and a freelance writer and lecturer on the Bible. She is the author of The Pentateuch (Continuum, 2000) and co-author with Dr Peter Kevern of Exploring New Testament Greek (SCM Press, 2004).