Bible History II - Lesson 3
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Old Testament Prophets
- PROPHETS OF ISRAEL
- Jonah
- 4 chapters, 48 verses
- Jonah means “dove”
- During the reign of Jeroboam II (2 Kings 14:25); book written around 770BC
- From Gath-hepher, about 3 miles northeast of Nazareth
- Ministry to Israel; book deals with special ministry to Ninevah
- Outline
- In a Boat for Tarshish (chapter 1)
- In the Belly of the Whale (chapter 2)
- In the Battle for the Lord (chapter 3)
- Under the Booth in a Mood (chapter 4)
- Amos
- 9 chapters, 146 verses
- Amos means “burden-bearer”
- Written around 760BC toward the end of the reign of Jeroboam II
- From Tekoa, a village 6 miles south of Bethlehem overlooking the Dead Sea
- Call while tending his flock (7:14-15)
- Ministered to Israel (1:1)
- Outline
- Judgments Against the Nations (chapters 1-2)
- Judgments Against Israel (chapters 3-6)
- Five Visions of Judgment (chapters 7-8)
- The Promised Messiah (chapter 9)
- Hosea
- 14 chapters, 197 verses
- Hosea means “salvation”
- Written around 725BC shortly before the Assyrian Captivity
- Ministry spans 7 kings of Israel and 4 kings of Judah
- Mostly ministered to Israel (4:1,15; 5:1; 7:1; 9:1-3; 10:1; 11:1-5)
- Outline
- The Unfaithful Wife (chapters 1-3)
- The Unfaithful Nation (chapters 4-14)
- PROPHETS OF JUDAH
- Obadiah
- 1 chapter, 21 verses
- Obadiah means “servant of the Lord”
- Time of writing unsure; one guess is between 840 and 825BC
- Lived in Judah; prophesied against Edom
- Joel
- 3 chapters, 73 verses
- Joel means “Jehovah is God”
- Probably written around 820BC
- Ministered to Judah
- Deals much with “the day of the LORD” (1:15; 2:1,11,31; 3:14)
- Isaiah
- 66 chapters
- Isaiah means “Jehovah saves”
- Ministered during the reigns of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah (1:1)
- Contemporary with the prophets Hosea and Micah
- Family
- Father – Amoz (1:1)
- Wife – a prophetess (8:3)
- His sons
- Maher-shalal-hash-baz (8:3) –means “speedy is the prey”
- Shear-jashub (7:3) –means “a remnant shall return:”
- Songs in Isaiah
- Song of the Vineyard (chapter 5)
- Song of the Redeemed (chapter 12)
- Song of the Blossoming Desert (chapter 35)
- Song of the Restored Wife (chapter 54)
- Outline
- Judgment of God (chapters 1-39)
- Comfort of God (chapters 40-66)
- Gospel According to Isaiah
- Birth (7:14; 9:6)
- Family (11:1)
- Anointing (11:2)
- Character (11:3-4)
- Simplicity of Life (7:15)
- Gentleness (42:1-4)
- Death (ch.53)
- Resurrection (25:8)
- Glorious reign (11:3-16; 32)
- Four messages to Judah (repeated throughout the book)
- Rebellion (1:2-4,10-15,21-23)
- Retribution (1:5-8,15,20,28)
- Repentance (1:16-19,27)
- Restoration (1:9,18,24-31)
- Key phrase – “Holy One of Israel” (25 times)
- Micah
- 7 chapters, 105 verses
- Micah means “Who is like unto Jehovah?”
- Probably written between 734 and 722BC
- From Moresheth-gath (1:1,14) about 20 miles southwest of Jerusalem
- Ministered mainly to Judah
- Six prophecies already fulfilled
- Fall of Samaria (1:6-7; 722BC)
- Invasion of Judah by Sennacherib (1:9-16; 702BC)
- Fall of Jerusalem (3:12; 7:13; 586BC)
- Exile in Babylon (4:10; 586BC)
- Return From Captivity (4:1-8,13; 7:11,14-17; 520BC)
- Birth of Jesus in Bethlehem (5:2)
- Quoted three times in the Bible
- Micah 3:12 in Jeremiah 29:18
- Micah 5:2 in Matthew 2:5-6
- Micah 7:6 in Matthew 10:35-36
- Nahum
- 3 chapters, 47 verses
- Nahum means “consolation” or “comforter”
- Written between 663 and 612BC
- From Elkosh (1:1) –location uncertain
- Book is a message of judgment to Ninevah; can be considered a sequel to the book of Jonah
- Zephaniah
- 3 chapters, 53 verses
- Zephaniah means “hidden, or protected, by Jehovah”
- Written about 627BC during the reign of Josiah
- Habakkuk
- 3 chapters, 56 verses
- Habakkuk means “embracer” (as in encourager)
- Probably written between 612 and 605BC
- Two-thirds of book written as a conversation between Habakkuk and God
- PROPHETS OF THE CAPTIVITY
- Jeremiah
- 52 chapters plus the 5 chapters of Lamentations
- Jeremiah means “Jehovah exalts, or establishes”
- Written before and after the time of the Babylonian conquest of Judah (586BC)
- Known as the “weeping prophet” (15:10; 10:14-18)
- From Anathoth just a few miles north of Jerusalem
- His father, Hilkiah, was a priest. Jeremiah was called from the priesthood to be a prophet (1:1-10)
- Suffered much (16:1-4; 26:7-16; 38:1-13)
- Object lessons in Jeremiah
- The almond rod (chapter 1)
- The boiling caldron (chapter 1)
- The marred girdle (chapter 13)
- The full bottle (chapter 13)
- The drought (chapter 14)
- The potter’s vessel (chapter 18)
- The broken bottle (chapter 19)
- Two baskets of figs (chapter 24)
- Bonds and bars (chapter 27)
- Buying a field (chapter 32)
- The hidden stones (chapter 43)
- Book sunk in the Euphrates (chapter 51)
- Christ Pictured in Jeremiah
- The Fountain of Living Waters (2:13)
- The Great Physician (8:22)
- The Good Shepherd (31:10; 23:4)
- The Righteous Branch (23:5)
- The Redeemer (50:34)
- The LORD our Righteousness (23:6)
- Key word – return (47 times)
- Ezekiel
- 48 chapters
- Ezekiel means “God strengthens”
- Written after 592BC; Ezekiel was in exile in Babylon
- Born of a priestly heritage (1:3)
- God revealed to Ezekiel on the same day the beginning of the siege of Jerusalem (24:2) and the death of his wife (24:15-18)
- Lived at Tel-abib (3:15) a city for exiles near Babylon near the river Chebar(1:1), the Grand Canal, which flowed from the Euphrates above Babylon and back into the Euphrates near Erech
- Met at his house with the elders of Judah (8:1; 14:1; 20:1)
- Visions of Ezekiel
- Vision of the Cherubim (chapter 1)
- Vision of the Roll (chapters 2-3)
- Vision of the Plain (chapter 3)
- Visions of Jerusalem (chapters 8-11)
- Vision of the Dry Bones (chapter 37)
- Visions of the New Temple (chapters 40-48)
- Symbolic Actions of Ezekiel
- Sign of the brick (4:1-3)
- Sign of the prophet’s posture (4:4-8)
- Sign of famine (4:9-17)
- Sign of the knife and razor (5:1-17)
- Sign of the house moving (12:1-7,17-20)
- Sign of the sharpened sword (21:1-17)
- Sign of Nebuchadnezzar’s sword (21:18-23)
- Sign of the smelting furnace (22:17-31)
- Sign of Ezekiel’s wife’s death (24:15-27)
- Sign of the two sticks (37:15-17)
- Allegories in Ezekiel
- The Vine (15:1-8)
- The Faithless Wife (16:1-63)
- The Two Eagles (17:1-21)
- The Cedar (17:22-24)
- The Two Women (23:1-49)
- The Boiling Caldron (24:1-14)
- Key words
- Son of man – over 90 times
- The word of the LORD came unto me – 49 times
- Outline
- Judgment (chapters 1-32)
- Restoration (chapters 33-48)
- Daniel
- 12 chapters, 357 verses
- Daniel means “God is Judge”
- Written between 605 and 536BC, the time of Daniel’s ministry
- Greatest prophecies in the Bible on the times of the Gentiles
- PROPHETS OF THE RETURN
- Haggai
- 2 chapters, 38 verses
- Haggai means “festive, or celebration”
- Written in 520BC
- Worked with Zechariah (Ezra 5:1; 6:14)
- Preached the importance of completing the temple (1:1-4)
- Zechariah
- 14 chapters, 211 verses
- Zechariah means “The Lord remembers”
- Written between 520-516BC
- Born into a priestly line (1:1)
- Preached the importance of completing the temple (4:6-10)
- Prophecies of Christ in Zechariah
- Servant (3:8)
- Branch (3:8; 6:12)
- King-Priest (6:13)
- Lowly King (9:9-10)
- Betrayed (11:12-13)
- Hands Pierced (12:10)
- Cleansing Fountain (13:1)
- Humanity and Deity (13:7; 6:12)
- Smitten Shepherd (13:7-9)
- Second Coming (14:5,9)
- Visions in Zechariah
- The Horseman (1:7-17)
- The Horns and the Carpenters (1:18-21)
- The Measuring Line (2)
- Joshua, the high Priest (3)
- The Golden Candlesticks (4)
- The Flying Roll (5:1-4)
- The Ephah (5:5-11)
- The Four Chariots (6:1-8)
- Malachi
- 4 chapters, 55 verses
- Malachi means “messenger of Jehovah”
- Probably written around 433BC
- Prophet to the Jews in the land after the return from captivity
- Ends the Old Testament with the word “curse”
Reagan, David