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  1. The Levitical authorship of Ezra-Nehemiah
    Published: ©2004
    Publisher:  T & T Clark International, London

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    Content information
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780567632722; 0567632725; 9780567082268; 0567082261
    Series: Journal for the study of the Old Testament ; 409
    Subjects: Bible / A.T. / Esdras / Critique, interprétation, etc; Bible / A.T. / Esdras / Authenticité; Bible / A.T. / Néhémie / Critique, interprétation, etc; Bible / A.T. / Néhémie / Authenticité; Lévites; RELIGION / Biblical Studies / Old Testament; Bible / Ezra; Bible / Nehemiah; Levites; Ezra (bijbelboek); Nehemia (bijbelboek); Auteurschap; Bibel; Levites; Textgeschichte
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xii, 179 pages)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references (pages 147-169)-and indexes

    Part I. Priestly or Levitical authorship? ; Ezra-Nehemiah as an independent single work -- Priestly or Levitical authorship? -- Part II. Literary context ; Levites in Old Testament texts since the exile -- Levites in Ezra-Nehemiah -- Part III. Historical context ; Two clues -- Levitical authorship

    The study of Ezra-Nehemiah has been revolutionized in recent years by a growing rejection of the long-established belief that it was composed as part of the Chronicler's work. That shift in scholarly paradigms has re-opened many questions of origin and purpose, and this thesis attempts to establish an answer to the most important of these: the question of authorship. Here, Kyungjin Min argues that Ezra-Nehemiah most likely originated in a Levitical group that received Persian backing during the late-fifth century BCE and that valued the ideologies of decentralization of power, unity and cooper