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Online Journal Article: "IMPULSE AND DESIGN IN THE BOOK OF HAGGAI," by DUANE L. CHRISTENSEN * JETS 35/4 (December 1992) 445-456
DUANE L. CHRISTENSEN

vol. 35, Issue #4

Online Journal Article: "IMPULSE AND DESIGN IN THE BOOK OF HAGGAI," by DUANE L. CHRISTENSEN * JETS 35/4 (December 1992) 445-456

https://www.etsjets.org/files/JETS-PDFs/35/35-4/JETS_35-4_445-456_Christensen.pdf

JETS* (Dec 1992)
GroupJ
| ONLINE
11 pages | 4.2 x 8.4 inch | USA | English
Dewey 225

Genre

  • *Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society

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Complete article may be found here:
https://www.etsjets.org/files/JETS-PDFs/35/35-4/JETS_35-4_445-456_Christensen.pdf

"IMPULSE AND DESIGN IN THE BOOK OF HAGGAI"
by DUANE L. CHRISTENSEN *
JETS 35/4 (December 1992) 445-456

Excerpt:
Comparison between the Hebrew texts of Haggai as edited by O. Procksch
in BHK (1937) and K. Elliger in BHS (1970) is revealing, as D. L. Petersen
has noted. Procksch saw the book as entirely a prose work, whereas Elliger
set forth more than half of the book in poetic form (Hag 1:3-11, 15; 2:3-9,
14-19, 20-23). Most of the citations of Haggai in P. R. Ackroyd's seminal discussion are also in the stichic form of Hebrew poetry. In some respects the situation parallels changes in scholarly perception of the prophetic literature of the Hebrew Bible in general during the modern period of critical scholarship. Though two hundred years ago relatively few translations or
commentaries saw much poetry in the prophetic literature, today large sections, particularly in Isaiah and Jeremiah, are recognized almost universally as poetic in form. Increasingly, more and more of the rest of the
Hebrew Bible is being read as poetry as well.
--from the first page of the article

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