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Obadiah analyzes and interprets the Hebrew text of Obadiah—allowing pastors to quickly grasp the big ideas of each passage and how they fit in Obadiah and the Old Testament’s greater context. Daniel I. Block demonstrates the many linguistic connections between words and expressions in the book of Obadiah itself, as well as within many other passages in both the Old and New Testaments.

(5) Mid-fourth century BC. A few scholars locate the prophecies considerably later to a context when Judah was under the rule of the Persians, perhaps near the time of Malachi or Nehemiah. Some associate the attack on Edom predicted in Obad 1–10 with the Nabatean Arab invasion of Edom. Others dehistoricize the book, interpreting “Edom” as a code word for the enemies of Israel in general. Ehud Ben Zvi argues that the target audience consists of a small group of highly educated literati in the Achaemenid
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