Long-Suffering Love: A Commentary on Hosea with Patristic Annotations
This is a substantial work on a most difficult prophetic book. Pentiuc probes carefully and thoroughly into the many problems of interpretation Hosea poses, grammatical and textual, historical, literary, and theological. And he does so drawing on a very wide acquaintance with the ancient sources, both Biblical and non-Biblical, and with classical and modern scholarship, all in a variety of languages. Particularly valuable, indeed a distinctive contribution of Pentiuc's work, is the extensive use of the commentaries of the ancient Church Fathers on Hosea. As Pentiuc shows, these remain fresh and provocative, offering readers a rich array of insights, especially into the meaning of Hosea for the nature of God and His ways with humanity.
(Peter Machinist)
Contents
Abbreviations |
p. ix |
Acknowledgments |
p. xv |
INTRODUCTION |
|
I. Historical Background: The Assyrian Expansion and the Last Years of Israel |
p. 1 |
II. The Eighth-Century Prophets: Yaweh’s Heralds at the Crossroads of History |
p. 4 |
III. Hosea: The Man and the Prophet |
p. 9 |
IV. The Book of the Prophet Hosea |
p. 12 |
1. Structure and Literary Composition |
p. 12 |
2. Language and Style |
p. 13 |
3. Text and Versions |
p. 17 |
4. Authenticity, Integrity, and Canonicity of the Book |
p. 19 |
5. Conjugal Drama of Hosea: Preliminaries |
p. 23 |
COMMENTARY The Book’s Title (1:1) 43 |
|
I. Hosea’s Conjugal Drama and Yahweh-Israel’s Covenant: From a Latent Crisis to an Obvious Breakup (1-3) |
|
1. Hosea’s Marriage and Children (1:2-9) |
p. 47 |
2. Restoration are Judgment (2:1/1:10-2:3/1) |
p. 59 |
3. The Last Warnings before Separation (2:4/2-15/13) |
p. 63 |
4. A Date in the Wilderness (2:16/14-25/23) |
p. 71 |
5. Love and Abstinence (3:1-5) |
p. 83 |
II. Israel Between Punishment and Forgiveness (4-11) |
|
1. Yahweh’s Dispute with Israel (4:1-3) |
p. 129 |
2. God’s Dispute with the Priests, Prophets, and People (4:4-19) |
p. 132 |
3. Leaders and People on a Wrong Path (5:1-7) |
p. 152 |
4. Ephraim and Judah in Conflict (5:8-15) |
p. 162 |
5. Repentance, Revival, and Yahweh’s Response (6:1-6) |
p. 173 |
6. Turmoil in Israel (6:7-7:2) |
p. 186 |
7. Political Instability (7:3-7) |
p. 195 |
8. Failed International Politics (7:8-16) |
p. 199 |
9. Ephraim’s Unfaithfulness (8:1-14) |
p. 207 |
10. On Exile and Prophecy (9:1-9) |
p. 221 |
11. Baal-peor and Gilgal (9:10-17) |
p. 232 |
12. Israel without Cult or King (10:1-8) |
p. 240 |
13. Gibeah and Beth-arbel (10:9-15) |
p. 249 |
14. God’s Tenderness (11:1-11) |
p. 257 |
III. The Last Sayings (12-14) |
|
1. Ephraim and Jacob (12:1/11:12-12:15/14) |
p. 345 |
2. The Destruction (13:1-14:1/13:16) |
p. 360 |
3. Love’s Triumph (14:2/1-9/8) |
p. 374 |
4. Epilogue (14:10/9) |
p. 383 |
Selected Bibliography |
p. 399 |
Product Description
Paperback: |
408 Pages |
Publisher: |
Holy Cross Orthodox Press |
ISBN: |
978-1-885652-58-4 |
Product Dimensions: |
6 x 9 |
Author: |
Eugene J. Pentiuc |
Publication Year: |
2002 |