These twelve prophets who stood for the truth of God had little in common with one another. They did not act as a group. The few who were contemporaries gave no indication that they knew one another, although Micah does share one passage with the major prophet Isaiah (Mic. 4:3; Is. 2:4), and Jeremiah quoted Micah in a narrative section a century after Micah’s lifetime (Jer. 26:18). Amos seems to have influenced Isaiah (Is. 5:11–13; Amos 6:1–7), and Jeremiah had a fondness for Hosea.1 Even Haggai