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Cover of Between Heaven and Earth

a novel ·

Between Heaven and Earth

by

"With the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple and the exile of members of the Israelite community to the land of its enemies, whose gods were represented as divine statues, the prophet Ezekiel faced a challenge: how to respond to the …

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"With the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple and the exile of members of the Israelite community to the land of its enemies, whose gods were represented as divine statues, the prophet Ezekiel faced a challenge: how to respond to the enemies' taunts that Israel's God was absent, whereas the foreigners' gods self-evidently were present. Thus, to ask the question, "Where is God" was to face several complex and tangled problems. How is God to be represented? How is Yahweh to be differentiated from other deities? What is Yahweh's relationship to Israel in exile?". "Kutsko sets out to answer these questions within the theme of divine presence and absence. He shows that God's absence becomes, for Ezekiel, an argument for his presence and power. Furthermore, God's presence is not consigned to sanctuary, for God is a sanctuary; his presence in exile becomes a message of victory even over imperial powers. In the end, Kutsko shows that the book of Ezekiel plays a central and previously unappreciated role in the development of Israelite theology."--BOOK JACKET.

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Margaret's verdict

""With the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple and the exile of members of the Israelite community to the land of its enemies, whose gods were represented as divine statues, the …"

— Margaret

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