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Malachi (Anchor Bible)
 
 
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Malachi (Anchor Bible) [Hardcover]

Andrew E. Hill (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Anchor Bible April 13, 1998
Admittedly, as the last book in the Old Testament, and a minor prophet at that, Malachi is often overlooked by Bible readers. Yet, Malachi's passionate proclamations and the significance of what he had to say to his people capture the attention of even the casual reader. The message of Malachi came at a time of cultural and religious rethinking for Israel (roughly 500 B.C.E), when God's people were scattered throughout the Near East, with most living in Mesopotamia under Persian rule. They could easily have disappeared from history had it not been for the prophetic call to repentance.



In his fresh new translation, notes, and comments on this brief prophetic book, Andrew E. Hill explains why we should pay attention to Malachi as God's spokesperson. Hill places the book in its historical context to interpret the original meaning, as well as offer the modern reader insights into what it has to say to us today. With a wonderful insert filled with photographs, line art, and maps, he provides all the necessary details for the reader to understand and appreciate Malachi.


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Admittedly, as the last book in the Old Testament, and a minor prophet at that, Malachi is often overlooked by Bible readers. Yet, Malachi's passionate proclamations and the significance of what he had to say to his people capture the attention of even the casual reader. The message of Malachi came at a time of cultural and religious rethinking for Israel (roughly 500 B.C.E), when God's people were scattered throughout the Near East, with most living in Mesopotamia under Persian rule. They could easily have disappeared from history had it not been for the prophetic call to repentance.

In his fresh new translation, notes, and comments on this brief prophetic book, Andrew E. Hill explains why we should pay attention to Malachi as God's spokesperson. Hill places the book in its historical context to interpret the original meaning, as well as offer the modern reader insights into what it has to say to us today. With a wonderful insert filled with photographs, line art, and maps, he provides all the necessary details for the reader to understand and appreciate Malachi.

From the Inside Flap

Admittedly, as the last book in the Old Testament, and a minor prophet at that, Malachi is often overlooked by Bible readers. Yet, Malachi's passionate proclamations and the significance of what he had to say to his people capture the attention of even the casual reader. The message of Malachi came at a time of cultural and religious rethinking for Israel (roughly 500 B.C.E), when God's people were scattered throughout the Near East, with most living in Mesopotamia under Persian rule. They could easily have disappeared from history had it not been for the prophetic call to repentance.

In his fresh new translation, notes, and comments on this brief prophetic book, Andrew E. Hill explains why we should pay attention to Malachi as God's spokesperson. Hill places the book in its historical context to interpret the original meaning, as well as offer the modern reader insights into what it has to say to us today. With a wonderful insert filled with photographs, line art, and maps, he provides all the necessary details for the reader to understand and appreciate Malachi.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 436 pages
  • Publisher: Anchor Bible; 1 edition (April 13, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 038546892X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385468923
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.4 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #996,301 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another excellent number in Anchor Bible Series, April 22, 2000
This review is from: Malachi (Anchor Bible) (Hardcover)
The richest section of this book in the Anchor Bible series is the 90 pages introduction that deals with text, canon, literary and historical aspects of the book and its date. The author has kept up AB series' tradition of thoroughness in dealing with the biblical text. On the top of a detailed commentary the author has offered some useful appendices: "von Bulmerincq's Categories for dating Malachi", "Typological Analysis of the Postexilic Prophets"; "Intertextuality in the Book of Malachi", "Vocabulary Richness in the Book of Malachi." An extensive bibliography (36 pages!) is certainly a boon to students of the book of Malachi. The author argues for a 500 BCE date for the Book of Malachi. He suggests that Ezra and Nehemiah are responsible for the final redaction of it.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Malachi's Most Comprehensive Treatment, May 27, 2011
Andrew Hill's commentary on Malachi is loaded with information. He thoroughly covers all the views on each introductory and interpretive issue. Plus he puts forth some of his own views, like his great case that Malachi fits best in the early 5th century BCE when Darius led Persia against the Greek world. There are several appendixes that provide readers with linguistic charts, comparisons of Hebrew phrases in Malachi with other OT books, etc. Hill's mastery of Biblical Hebrew is readily apparent, although he constantly uses Waltke and O'Connor's grammar authoritatively and exclusively.

Unfortunately, however, the Anchor Bible format is often completely uninviting, as is the case with "Malachi." Subsections and headings aren't as helpful as they could be. Navigating the work is awkward and tedious. The sentences and paragraphs are broken up with so many parenthetical notes that clarity is often lost. In some ways, there is too much information - too many tangents and references of secondary sources - making the work really inaccessible to those outside of critical scholarship.

Still, this work is a must have if you want to study Malachi at the most serious level. If you're teaching in a faith context, however, you might check out Pieter Verhoef's NICOT commentary "Haggai, Malachi." You can find it cheaper, it's a terrific, insightful commentary, plus you also get a great commentary on Haggai!

Overall, the content merits a 5, but the unhelpful format merits a 2 or 3! I want to give it a 4, but the content is still so rich and thorough that I'll overlook the format and stick with 5/5 stars (with the caveat that this is only for the most rigorous, academic study of Malachi).
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
This catalog of the significant variant readings in the primary versions of the text of Malachi serve as an introduction and an orientation to the Translation and Notes advanced in the commentary. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
prefixing conjugation, verb bgd, relative waw, tôrat móseh, melek gadôl, fourth disputation, fifth disputation, audience rebuttal, preposition bęt, suffixed object pronoun, lamed marks, disputational format, opening disputation, prefixing form, verb swb, epexegetical waw, final disputation, sixth disputations, conjunctive waw, preposition lamed, literary subunit, verb smr, third disputation, adverb gam, copulative waw
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Second Temple, Twelve Prophets, John the Baptist, Minor Prophets, Hebrew Bible, King Artaxerxes, New York, Yahweh's Temple, Cyrus the Great, Latter Prophets, Primary History, King Darius, Leningrad Codex, Second Zechariah, Temple of Yahweh, Württembergische Bibelanstalt, Yahweh of Hosts, Year Month Day Month
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Front Cover | Front Flap | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Flap | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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