
The Two Testaments Malachi
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Apr 29, 2024 Dr. Julia O'Brien from Lancaster Theological Seminary discusses the book of Malachi, covering themes like corrupt priesthood, gendered language translation, disputes structure, and God's love for Israel. They explore marriage as a metaphor, the sacrificial system, and the significance of tithing. The podcast also touches on the tradition of Eijah's return, the messenger of God, and interpreting passages about divorce and idolatry. The conversation extends to the impact of climate change literature through the lens of Kly-Fi.
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How O'Brien Entered Prophetic Studies
- Julia O'Brien described her path into prophetic studies: a graduate seminar on the Persian period led her to Malachi and then to broader prophetic work.
- Her first book on Malachi (1990) was the scholarly entry that expanded into a career on the prophets.
Compare Multiple Translations
- Consult a range of translations (e.g., KJV/ASV, NIV, NRSV, JPS) to reveal different interpretive choices and biases.
- Avoid relying on a single modern translation for preaching or doctrinal claims.
Disputations Drive The Book's Structure
- Malachi is structured as a sequence of disputations: God asserts, the people question, God replies and exposes their failures.
- Key topics include God's love, the corrupt priesthood, justice, scarcity, and why to serve God.
