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DOI: 10.1177/030908920202700207 Building the Second Temple: Questions of Time, Text, and History in Haggai 1.1-15Tyndale Seminary, 25 Ballyconnor Court, Toronto, ON M2M 4B3, Canada The peoples reticence expressed in Hag. 1.2 has been understood by some interpreters as reflecting the belief that Yahweh had not yet authorized the temples reconstruction, rather than as a rationalization for the communitys misplaced priorities. However, exegetical, text-, form-, literary- and ideological-critical considerations cast doubt upon this reading. Rather, the texts redactor presents Haggai as a successful prophet whose words of reproach pierce the peoples recalcitrant hearts. In the light of broader ancient Near Eastern parallels, it is, nevertheless, plausible that objections to the temples reconstruction on ideological grounds did exist in Early Persian Yehud. Haggai 1.2 may demonstrate the selectivity with which a historical context may be portrayed, and provides an example of the difficulties of using prophetic texts in historical reconstructions.
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