The Prophecies of Jeremiah [and Lamentations]; Volume 1
- 434 páginas
- 16 horas de lectura
Johann Friedrich Karl Keil fue un conservador comentarista luterano alemán del Antiguo Testamento. Es mejor conocido por sus contribuciones a los comentarios de Keil y Delitzsch, una serie de diez volúmenes escrita con Franz Delitzsch. Su obra se centra en el estudio meticuloso del texto y la interpretación teológica del Antiguo Testamento. El análisis de Keil se caracteriza por su precisión y dedicación a una perspectiva luterana tradicional sobre las escrituras.



![The Prophecies of Jeremiah [and Lamentations]; Volume 1](https://rezised-images.knhbt.cz/1920x1920/0.jpg)
C.F. Keil was a scholar strongly committed to confessional theology. His dogmatic-confessional approach is particularly evident in his approach to the Pentateuch. He strongly supported Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch and rejected attempts to explain extraordinary events in the history of Israel as anything but miraculous, divine intervention. Keil showed much interest in the historical development of divine revelation. Viewing the prophets as persons who were able to perceive future trajectories of God's saving acts, he presented history and revelation as interdependent rather than fundamentally dissimilar. Prophetic predictions then find their fulfillment in the historical person of Christ. This introduction to the Old Testament reveals Keil's foundational presuppositions - presuppositions which shaped his contribution to the well-known and influential Keil-Delitzsch 'Biblical Commentary', which includes Keil's commentaries on all the books from Genesis to Esther, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Daniel, and the Minor Prophets.
This classic translation of three foundational texts from the Old Testament offers valuable insights into the history, theology, and culture of ancient Hebrew society. An essential reference for scholars of religion and history, as well as anyone interested in the Bible as literature.