ID - 2923454 TI - L'oracle de Nathan et l'unité du livre d'Isaïe PY - 2004 VL - 343 SN - 3110181835 3110915693 9783110181838 PB - Berlin: de Gruyter, DB - UniCat KW - 224.2 KW - Jesaja. Isaias KW - Bible. O.T. Isaiah KW - Criticism, interpretation, etc KW - Nathan the Prophet KW - David, KW - Bible. KW - Criticism, interpretation, etc. KW - Theology and Religious Studies KW - Biblische Prophetie. KW - Intertextualität. KW - Jesaja (Buch). KW - Redaktionsgeschichte. KW - Redaktion KW - RELIGION / Biblical Criticism & Interpretation / Old Testament. KW - Bearbeitung KW - Redaktionsgeschichtliche Methode KW - Redaktionsgeschichte KW - Old Testament and Ancient Near East KW - Prophets KW - Isaiah. KW - Bibel KW - Daud, KW - Dāwūd, KW - Nabī Dāwūd, KW - דוד KW - דוד, KW - דוד המלך KW - David (Biblical figure) KW - Book of Isaiah (Book of the Old Testament) KW - Ēsaias (Book of the Old Testament) KW - Esaïe (Book of the Old Testament) KW - Isaia (Book of the Old Testament) KW - Isaiah (Book of the Old Testament) KW - Isaias (Book of the Old Testament) KW - Isaïe (Book of the Old Testament) KW - Izaya sho KW - Jesaja (Book of the Old Testament) KW - Jesajabuch (Book of the Old Testament) KW - Sefer Y'sha'yah (Book of the Old Testament) KW - Yeshaʻyahu (Book of the Old Testament) KW - Y'sha'yah (Book of the Old Testament) UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:2923454 AB - Die Monographie fragt nach der Einheit des Jesajabuches. Wollte die endgültige Textgestalt des Jesajabuches eine Antwort geben auf die Infragestellung der Treue YHWHs zu seinen Zusagen an David durch den Propheten Nathan (II Sam 7)? Der Hintergrund der Nathansweissagung - verankert vor allem im Bund zwischen dem Königshaus Davids und dem Haus YHWHs - bildet den roten Faden, der die Leser durch die 66 Kapitel des Jesajabuches leitet und es als Erbe der Verheißung darstellt. Der Sinnzuwachs durch die Endredaktion stellt umgekehrt auch die Frage nach der Rolle der Redaktoren in der prophetischen Literatur. This monograph enquires into the unity of the Book of Isaiah. Was the final text of Isaiah intended to give an answer to the prophet Nathan's questioning of YHWH's faithfulness to his promises to David (II Sam 7)? The background to Nathan's prophecy - anchored above all in the union between the Royal House of David and the House of YHWH - forms the thread leading the reader through the 66 chapters of the Book of Isaiah and presenting it as the inheritance of the promise. The added meaning given by the final redaction in its turn poses the question of the role played by redactors in the prophetic literature. ER -