ABSTRACT
The prophetic books of the Old Testament offer a fascinating collection of oracles, poetic images, and theological ideas. Among the most prominent themes are those of judgment and salvation, especially concerning the fate of Zion. This place, where the people of God dwell, is alternately presented as either the object of divine wrath or the image of a salvific ideal.
Representing Zion provides a thorough and critical study of the images of Zion in the entire prophetic literature of the Old Testament. The book challenges traditional interpretations of Zion and offers a fresh exploration of the literary and theological nature of the biblical writings. Zion has largely been treated by scholars as an image of the inviolable city consistently and unambiguously used by Old Testament authors. Representing Zion reveals the Zion motif to be contested, complex and profoundly theological—a reflection of the ambiguous role of YHWH as judge and saviour.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |21 pages
Introduction
part |54 pages
Zion in the old Testament
chapter |11 pages
Isaiah
chapter |8 pages
Jeremiah
chapter |8 pages
Ezekiel
chapter |12 pages
The Book of the Twelve
chapter |13 pages
The Remaining Books
part |116 pages
The Zion Motifs: Between Judgement and Salvation