Like the first volume in this series (Wealth Watch, Pickwick, 2011) this book attempts to do two things: (a) examine the primary socioeconomic motifs in the Bible from a comparative intertextual perspective, and (b) trace the trajectory formed by these motifs through Tanak into early Jewish and Nazarene texts. Where Wealth Watch focuses on Torah, Wealth Warn focuses on the single largest section of the Bible–the Prophets. Where the ancient Near Eastern texts surveyed in Wealth Watch include the Epic of Gilgamesh, Atrahasis, and the Epic of Erra, the texts examined here include Inanna’s Descent, the Babylonian Creation Epic (enūma elish), the Disappearance of Telipinu, and the Ba`al Epic. Where the Jewish texts surveyed in Wealth Watch include historical and sectarian texts, the texts studied here include Ezra-Nehemiah, the Epistle of Jeremiah and Tobit. Where the Nazarene texts in Wealth Watch focus on the stewardship parables found in the Gospel of Luke, the texts examined here focus on several prophetic vignettes from the Gospel of Matthew and Acts of the Apostles.
Despre autor
Michael S. Moore (Ph D, Drew University) teaches courses about the Hebrew Bible to students at Arizona State University, Fuller Theological Seminary, and the Arizona Research Center for the Ancient Near East (www.arcane-az.com), where he serves as Director. He is the author of The Balaam Traditions: Their Character and Development (Scholars Press, 1990) and Wealth Watch: A Study of Socioeconomic Conflict in the Bible (Pickwick, 2011).