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Index
Title
Copyright
Contents
4 The History of Israelite Religion in the Exilic Period
4.1 Sociological developments during the exile
4.11 The situation among those who remained in the land
4.12 The situation in the Babylonian Gola
4.13 The situation in the Egyptian Gola
4.14 The basic features of the sociological development
4.2 The struggle over a theological interpretation of the political catastrophe
4.21 Mourning in exilic worship
4.22 The conflict over the acceptance of the prophetic opposition theology
4.23 The missionary work of enlightenment among the people by the Jeremiah Deuteronomists
4.24 The struggle for a theological understanding of a failed history
4.3 The support for Yahweh religion from family piety
4.31 The borrowings from personal piety
4.32 The reference back to the patriarchs
4.33 The family as a new vehicle for official Yahweh religion
4.4 Towards a new beginning
4.41 ‘Deutero-Isaiah’s’ proclamation of salvation
4.42 The Ezekiel school’s plan for reform
5 The History of Israelite Religion in the Post-Exilic Period
5.1 Political and sociological developments in the Persian period
5.2 The key experience of the failed restoration
5.21 The building of the temple and early post-exilic prophecy of salvation
5.22 The fiasco of the prophecy of salvation and its ‘eschatologizing’
5.23 The second temple
5.3 The struggle over the identity of the community
5.31 The canonization of the Torah and the Persian imperial organization
5.32 The pre-priestly composition of the Pentateuch
5.33 The priestly composition of the Pentateuch
5.4 The social and religious split in the community
5.41 The social crisis of the fifth century
5.42 The ethical and religious split in the upper class
5.43 The formation of prophetic sects in the lower class
5.5 The convergence of the religious strata and the split in personal piety
5.51 The post-exilic convergence of personal piety and official religion
5.52 ‘Theologized wisdom’ as a personal theology of the upper class
5.53 The ‘piety of the poor’ in lower-class circles
5.6 The Samaritans: a political and cultic split
5.61 The sources and the chronological framework
5.62 The sociological and historical context
6 A Prospect on the History of Religion in the Hellenistic Period
6.1 The sociological developments
6.2 The scribal ideal of a theocracy (Chronicles)
6.3 Torah piety
6.4 Late prophetic and apocalyptic theology of resistance
6.41 Oppositional eschatological interpretation of history (Zech.9-14)
6.42 An eschatological assurance of salvation from lower-class circles (Isa.24-27)
6.43 Apocalyptic instructions for resistance
Notes
Abbreviations
Index of Biblical References
Subject Index
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