Prophecy The Books
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UnsettlingReview Date: 2007-05-29


Book explains the closing prophecy of Malachi.Review Date: 1999-04-02

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Daniel 9:25-26 predicted exact time for the Messiah!Review Date: 2002-10-21
1. Daniel makes it very clear that the Messiah will come and be "cut off" (die) before the people of the prince (the Romans) shall come and destroy the city (Jerusalem) and the temple. (Daniel 9:26)
2. The Messiah must come 483 years after a specific date in Daniel's time, which was the date of the commandment to restore and build Jerusalem - this was decreed by Artaxerxes in 444 B.C. (Daniel 9:25, 26) The date for the Messiah to make His triumphal entry into Jerusalem would be 70 x 7 or 490 years beyond the date of 444 B.C.
3. The following is an exact quote from the booklet as it refers to the mathematics of Sir Robert Anderson.
"He starts with March 14, 444 B. C., the date of the commandment to restore and build Jerusalem; and he ends the period with Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem (which he believes was the official presentation of the Messiah as "Prince" to Israel. After careful investigation and consultation with noted astronomers, he gives these startling findings: From 444 B.C. to 32 A.D. is 476 years; 476 x 365 = 173,740 days; from March 14 to April 6 (the day of Christ's triumphal entry) is 24 days; add 116 days for leap years, and you get a total of 173,880 days. Since the "prophetic year" of the Bible is always 360 days, the 69 sevens of this prophecy in Daniel (69 x 7 x 360) is 173,880 days! And so the time given by Daniel from the "commandment to restore and build Jerusalem" to "Messiah the Prince" comes out perfectly to the very day!"
4. Jesus of Nazareth fulfills ALL the specifications as to His lineage, His birthplace, and the time of His birth. Amazingly, within a generation of Christ's sufferings on the cross, the temple was destroyed (70 A.D.), the Jewish priesthood ceased to exist, the sacrifices were no longer offered, the Jews' genealogical records were destroyed, and the people of Israel were driven out of their land, sold into slavery, and dispersed to the four corners of the earth. Hence, it has been utterly impossible for a "Messiah" to come with proper credentials such as the Old Testament demands and such as Jesus of Nazareth presented.
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Hearing voices...Review Date: 2006-10-08
Heschel's book 'The Prophets' became an almost instant classic. Simply reading through the chapter titles and subtitles (a partial list of titles appears at the bottom of this review) will give a sense of the breadth and depth of this work.
Heschel sees an urgent need for prophets and prophecy in today's world. He said the things that horrified the prophets are even now daily occurrences all over the world. In examining the prophecies of Amos, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Nathan, &c, he discerns the common strands of the word of God in all that they said and did, and teaches the reader how to discern similar prophetic aspects in today's world. 'The prophet is human, yet he employs note one octave too high for our ears.'
The Bible says, let him who has ears to hear, listen. Alas, ordinarily we do not have the hearing range to be able to give adequate attention and comprehension to today's prophetic voices. Most often the voice of the prophet is one we do not want to hear (look at how the Israelites reacted to their prophets!). Prophets were often seen as doom-sayers and problematic people.
Indeed, every prediction of disaster is in itself an exhortation to repentance. The prophet is sent not only to upbraid, but to 'strengthen the weak hands and make firm the feeble knees.'
Every prophetic utterance, according to Heschel, has to have within its core a message of hope. Without hope, without a promise to greater community and participation in the love of God, there is no true prophecy. The road may be hard and long, involving pain and even death, but in the end, the prophet's goal is greater life for all.
According to Heschel, 'To be a prophet is both a distinction and an affliction.' Being a prophet has never been a chosen profession. Indeed, like Jonah, we'll often go to extraordinary lengths to avoid even the smallest call to prophecy. Prophetic voices are inconvenient, not least of which to the person charged to be the speaker of that voice. Yet the prophet is much more than a mouthpiece.
Heschel also says the prophet claims to be far more than a messenger. He is a person who stands in the presence of God. The prophet becomes one with God in many ways, yet remains a human being. This creates a tension in the prophet, as Heschel writes about Isaiah: Indeed, two sympathies dwell in a prophet's soul: sympathy for God and sympathy for the people. Speaking to the people, he is emotionally at one with God; in the presence of God, beholding a vision, he is emotionally at one with the people.
Yet prophecy has its limits. Heschel states that a prophet can give man a new word, but not a new heart.... Prophecy is not God's only instrument. What prophecy fails to bring about, the new covenant will accomplish: the complete transformation of every individual.
It was the prophet who, long before ideas of political unity and divers peoples living together in community, first conceived of the idea of a unity that binds all human beings together.
Read and prepare to be enlightened, inspired, irritated, and educated.
Chapters include:
- What manner of man is the prophet?
- History
- Chastisement
- Justice
- The Theology of Pathos
- The Philosophy of Pathos
- Anthropopathy
- The Meaning and Mystery of Wrath
- Religion of Sympathy
- Prophecy and Ecstasy
- Prophecy and Poetic Inspiration
- Prophecy and Psychosis (there is a fine line between prophecy and madness, after all!)
Heschel sums up in a sense in this way: This, then, is the ultimate category of prophetic theology: involvement, attentiveness, concern. Prophetic religion may be defined, not as what man does with his ultimate concern, but rather what man does with God's concern.

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Makes you think A+Review Date: 2002-11-28

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Principles to LawsReview Date: 2008-03-27
Neusner argues that the Rabbis initiated a program of "Rabbinization of prophesy".
He says this: "The program calls for the demonstration of the unity of the commandments, with stress on their ethical and moral contents. The Rabbis wished to reduce the diverse components of the moral code to a single PRINCIPLE [my emphasis] capable of containing details and forming of them an encompassing generalization." [pages 8 - 9]
In short, Neusner argues that the Rabbis were looking for an "absolute postulate" [see page 89 of Freedom v A Tyranny of Rights], a sort of Scriptural version of the "basic principle of the moral" [page 138 of Freedom v A Tyranny of Rights] which would reduce the commandments, and thus the whole law, to a single basic principle.
That is the fascinating aspect of this book; because it is basically the thesis of Freedom v A Tyranny of Rights. Where I depart from the Rabbinical perspective, however, is that I argue that the Ten Commandments also can and do provide basic principles even if we do not believe in a God. That is what the Ten Principles of Freedom are.
According to Neusner, for the Rabbis "all exposition takes for granted that the one, unique God gave the Torah and that the Laws and theological convictions contained therein govern and sanctify Israel."[page 3]
Taking that proposition as given, Neusner says this: "The Rabbis inherited Scripture - God's words in God's own wording - and through logical analysis uncovered the governing principles that permitted extending revelation and the revealed rules to new cases." [page 9]
From there, says Neusner, "The power to know the truth derived from mastery of those principles and capacity to apply them to unknown situations." [page 16]
Thus "Prophesy is relegated to matters of Torah-study, and the Rabbi's power of Prophesy is realized in his power to reason." [page 16]
Neusner then goes on to examine each of the Prophets in turn to demonstrate how the Rabbis used them to support various Halakhic issues. As Neusner so eloquently demonstrates, the Rabbis referred to the Prophets primarily in support of Halakhic rulings, and often (or mostly) cited verses from the Prophets out of context. But the impressive aspect of the analysis is the application of logic and reason to issues relating to the Law.
Yet, the whole discourse proceeds from the standpoint that there is a God, and He gave the Torah.
By contrast, in constructing the Ten Principles of Freedom, I work the other way round. I start from the proposition that we can never know (as the Scriptures themselves warn - Eccl 3:18, 20 &21 for example) whether there is in FACT a God, but that we can determine that there are basic principles which reason dictates are the only principles that can secure our individual and collective freedom. But because absolute freedom can only lead to conflict, I argue that individuals would agree to modify that absolute freedom in order to protect it. But the only way that we could agree to what obligations should apply is if we can determine some discernable purpose of life.
Thus I argue for Principle 5 (reflected in the Fifth Commandment), and the other 5 Principles which emerge from that Principle (reflected in Commandments 6 to 10). And further, the obligations that we would agree to adopt as a result of Principle 5 thus become what we recognize as morality.
So whereas Neusner demonstrates that the Rabbis applied reason and logic to the principles already set out in the Torah to establish a canon of Rabbinical Law, I argue that the application of logic and reason leads to the Principles in the first place, even for those who deny any God-given principles. But I converge with Neusner's assessment of the Rabbis' claim that the "power to know the truth ..." is derived from "mastery of those principles ...", only I argue that the Principles can stand independent of a God if rooted in a discernable and unchallengeable purpose of life.
The book is certainly worth a read, even for those who know little about Judaism (like me). But as I have said, for me, the fascinating aspect is the search for and application of Principles in order to elaborate a system of Law - the argument I propose in Freedom v A Tyranny of Rights.
Joseph BH McMillan

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Sid Roth"s Vision for Christians and Messianic JewsReview Date: 2007-02-09


A must read for everyone!Review Date: 2008-03-17
-Travis Harmon
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Excellent book on apocalyptic writingsReview Date: 2008-01-05
The chapters are:
Preface
Intro: Reading the signs
Ch. 1: The setting for apocalyptic thought
Ch. 2 Origin of Apocalyptice Literature
Ch. 3 Teachings of Apocalyptic Literature
Ch. 4 Apocalyptic Elements in the gospels and Acts
Ch. 5 Apocalyptic Elements in the Epistles
Ch. 6 The Book of Revelation
Conclusion: The Future Was Then
Reading the Signs, by TC Smith, stays out in the open and I regularly pick it up and read from it, although it is becoming dog-eared with use and ill treatment. If you can find a copy, grab it!

H M S Richards, Walking Through The BibleReview Date: 2008-01-01
He was a great preacher with over 8000 books in his library. Also he was the first to have a regular Radio broadcast on Radio,(The Voice of Prophecy) This is my fourth year to use this valueable guide to the Bible.
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Through a progression of historical anecdotes and logical demonstrations, this book leads the reader to unsettling conclusions. Do not read "Prophets and Frauds" if you cherish your complacency.